Platonic Ethics, Old and New 9780801466977

Julia Annas here offers a fundamental reexamination of Plato's ethical thought by investigating the Middle Platonis

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Table of contents :
CONTENTS
PREFACE
INTRODUCTION: DISCOVERING A TRADITION
[I] MANY VOICES: DIALOGUE AND DEVELOPMENT IN PLATO
[II] TRANSFORMING YOUR LIFE: VIRTUE AND HAPPINESS
[III] BECOMING LIKE GOD: ETHICS, HUMAN NATURE, AND THE DIVINE
[IV] BECOMING LIKE GOD: ETHICS, HUMAN NATURE, AND THE DIVINE
[V] WHAT USE IS THE FORM OF THE GOOD? ETHICS AND METAPHYSICS IN PLATO
[VI] HUMANS AND BEASTS: MORAL THEORY AND MORAL PSYCHOLOGY
[VII] ELEMENTAL PLEASURES: ENJOYMENT AND THE GOOD IN PLATO
APPENDIX: HEDONISM IN THE PROTAGORAS
CAST OF CHARACTERS
EDITIONS USED
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX LOCORUM
INDEX OF NAMES AND SUBJECTS
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The Townsend Lectures The Department of Classics at Cornell University is fortunate to have at its disposal the Prescott W. Townsend Fund—established by Mr. Townsend s widow, Daphne Townsend, in 1982. Since 1985, income from the fund has been used to support the annual visit of a distinguished scholar in the field of classics. Each visiting scholar delivers a series of lectures, which, revised for book publication, are published by Cornell University Press in Cornell Studies in Classical Philology. During the semester of their residence, Townsend lecturers effectively become members of the Cornell Department of Classics and teach a course to Cornell students as well as deliver the lectures. The Townsend Lectures bring to Cornell University, and to Cornell University Press, scholars of international reputation who are in the forefront of current classical research and whose work represents the kind of close reading of texts that has become associated with current literary discourse, or reflects broad interdisciplinary concerns, or both.

CORNELL STUDIES IN CLASSICAL PHILOLOGY EDITED BY

FREDERICK M. AHL * KEVIN CLINTON JOHN E. COLEMAN * JUDITH R. GINSBURG G. M. KIRKWOOD * DAVID MANKIN GORDON M. MESSING * ALANJ. NUSSBAUM HAYDEN PELLICCIA * PIETRO PUCCI JEFFREY S. RUSTEN * DANUTA SHANZER VOLUME LVII Platonic Ethics, Old and New by Julia Annas

ALSO IN THE TOWNSEND LECTURES Artifices of Eternity: Horace's Fourth Book of Odes, by Michael C. J. Putnam Socrates, Ironist and Moral Philosopher, by Gregory Vlastos Culture and National Identity in Republican Rome, by W. R. Johnson Horace and the Dialectic of Freedom: Readings in "Epistles i", by W. R. Johnson Animal Minds and Human Morals: The Origins of the Western Debate, by Richard Sorabji Ammianus Marcellinus and the Representation of Historical Reality, by Timothy D. Barnes

Platonic Ethics, Old and New Julia Annas

Cornell University Press Ithaca and London

Copyright © 1999 by Cornell University All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in a review, this book, or parts thereof, must not be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from the publisher. For information, address Cornell University Press, Sage House, 512 East State Street, Ithaca, New York 14850. First published 1999 by Cornell University Press First printing, Cornell Paperbacks, 2000 Printed in the United States of America

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA

Annas, Julia. Platonic ethics, old and new / Julia Annas. p. cm. — (Cornell studies in classical philology ; v. 57. The Townsend lectures) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-8014-3518-8 (cloth : alk. paper) ISBN 0-8014-8517-7 (pbk. : alk. paper) i.Plato—Ethics. 2. Platonists. 3. Ethics, Ancient. I. Title. II. Series: Cornell studies in classical philology ; v. 57. III. Series: Cornell studies in classical philology. Townsend lectures. B398.E8A56 1998 i7o'.92—DC2i 98-30418

Cornell University Press strives to use environmentally responsible suppliers and materials to the fullest extent possible in the publishing of its books. Such materials include vegetable-based, low-VOC inks and acid-free papers that are recycled, totally chlorine-free, or partly composed of nonwood fibers. Books that bear the logo of the FSC (Forest Stewardship Council) use paper taken from forests that have been inspected and certified as meeting the highest standards for environmental and social responsibility. For further information, visit our website at www.cornellpress.cornell.edu.

1 3 5 7 9 Cloth printing 10 8 6 4 2 1 3 5 7 9 Paperback printing 10 8 6 4 2

CONTENTS

I II III IV V VI VII

Preface

vii

Introduction: Discovering a Tradition Many Voices: Dialogue and Development in Plato Transforming Your Life: Virtue and Happiness Becoming Like God: Ethics, Human Nature, and the Divine The Inner City: Ethics without Politics in the Republic What Use Is the Form of the Good? Ethics and Metaphysics in Plato Humans and Beasts: Moral Theory and Moral Psychology Elemental Pleasures: Enjoyment and the Good in Plato Conclusion

1 9 31

96 117 137 162

Appendix: Hedonism in the Protagoras Cast of Characters Editions Used Bibliography Index Locorum Index of Names and Subjects

167 173 179 181 185 193

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PREFACE

I was greatly honored by the invitation to give the Townsend Lectures in spring 1997, but understandably daunted by the prospect of producing rather unorthodox views on Plato at an institution famous for its rigor and scholarship. The experience, it turned out, was as intellectually stimulating and challenging as I expected, and also very enjoyable. For this I have to thank the warm hospitality of Cornell's Classics Department, especially Jeffrey and Caroline Rusten, Pietro Pucci and Jeannine Routier-Pucci, Charles and Harriet Brittain, Danuta Shanzer, John Coleman, and Laura Purdy. I am also very grateful to members of the Philosophy Department, just up the stairs, who also made me welcome, especially Norman and Barbara Kretzmann, Jason Stanley, Scott and Jane MacDonald, Carl Ginet and Sally McConnell Ginet, and Zoltan Szabo. I owe special thanks to Terry Irwin and Gail Fine and to Charles and Harriet Brittain for all their help and friendship, and for making my time in Ithaca so enjoyable. Nancy Sokol and Miriam Zubal helped me find my way around a new institution and cope with computer problems and the like with great patience, good humor, and extensive knowledge. Nancy organized the actual giving of the Townsend Lectures and the initial reception with amazing equanimity, for which I feel gratitude and admiration. The audience at the Townsend Lectures gave me many points to think about, and so did the members of the Townsend seminar. Terry Irwin and Charles Brittain came faithfully and gave me many probing and thoughtful responses. I am sure that I have not met these to their satisfaction, but they have greatly deepened my understanding of the material and the issues. Among the other seminar members, I would like to mention Travis Butler, Todd Ganson, Stephen Gardiner, Keith McPartland, Lisa Rivera, and Kate Woolfitt, who contributed

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PREFACE in one or another way to my final reworking of the lectures. Peter AronofF was an excellent and energizing research assistant as well as a participant in the seminar. I would also like to thank Tim Bayne for help with the index. I am very grateful to the Getty Center for supporting me as a Getty Scholar for the year during which the foundations for this book were laid. The Center provided the ideal atmosphere for encouraging research into what was for me an unexplored area, and I am most grateful to the then director, Salvatore Settis, the other Scholars, and the Center's helpful and supportive staff. I am also grateful for discussion and comments on the material at various points, including the penultimate version, from John Armstrong, Paul Bloomfield, Tom Christiano, Dale Cooke, Daniel Farnham, Cindy Holder, Scott LaBarge, Mark LeBar, Kurt Meyers, Daniel Russell, and Jennifer Ryan. I am sure that there are other faculty, visitors, and graduate students at the University of Arizona from whose comments I have benefited; I apologize if I can't at this point distinguish your contribution. I am particularly grateful for written comments at a late stage from John Armstrong, Christopher Bobonich, David Brink, Brad Inwood, Terry Irwin and Charles Kahn. Jan Opsomer's splendid work In Search of the Truth: Academic Tendencies in Middle Platonism (Brussels, 1998) came too late for me to take account of it, especially of its thorough treatment of Plutarch's first Platonic Question, a work I also see as important for our understanding of the relation of skeptical and doctrinal approaches in later interpretations of Plato. The jacket picture shows an Athenian official of the second century A.D., a period when some of the later Platonists discussed here were writing. Despite his rather unintellectual job of running the city gymnasia, he chose to have his portrait assimilated to the standard likeness of Plato. As always, I am greatly in debt to my family for their support, and particularly in this case for not only doing without me for four months but being so supportive at a distance, and for not minding that e-mail communication seemed to make no impact on the phone bill. The book is dedicated to my husband, David Owen, and our daughter, Laura, with love as always. JULIA ANNAS

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Platonic Ethics

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INTRODUCTION: DISCOVERING A TRADITION

The title of this book tries to bring out the point that, with respect to Plato's ethics, when we take a look at the interpretations of the ancients, we find something which is not just old, in the sense of being an object of historical study, but also new, in the sense of giving us a new insight into Plato's ethical thinking. By "the ancients" here I mean in particular the so-called Middle Platonists. This is not their own self-conception; like people in what we call the Middle Ages, they did not think of themselves as being in the middle of anything. In the ancient world they were just Platonists. Modern scholarship has called them Middle because they come between the period when Plato's own school, the Academy, was skeptical and the period of "Neoplatonism," beginning with Plotinus. (Chronologically, they come somewhere between the first century B.C. and the second century A.D.) The "Middle" Platonists are not a unified school; they are a set of rather different people producing interpretations of Plato's ideas, taken to be a unified set of doctrines. About some of them, such as Plutarch, we know a fair amount; but most of our important philosophical texts have authors who are mere names to us, and whose dates are utterly uncertain. For us the tradition of Middle Platonism is basically a set of texts—perhaps appropriately, since these are the first philosophers in a Platonic tradition to see their task as that of interpreting Plato's own texts systematically.1 Earlier, Aristotle had interpreted Plato as holding doctrines, but not in order to present them as a Platonic phi1

I draw from the work of Alcinous, Arius Didymus (not himself a Platonist, but an author who shares some sources with Alcinous), Apuleius, Albinus, Plutarch, Philo of Alexandria (who is relevant although he would not see himself as a Middle Platonist), and the Anonymous Commentator on the Theaetetus, as well as from some other ancient authors.

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P L A T O N I C E T H I C S , OLD AND NEW losophy to be argued for or against; rather, Aristotle presents Plato as just one among many philosophers contributing to the ongoing discussion of philosophical problems later given their more adequate formulation by Aristotle himself. As a result, Aristotle's accounts of Plato's ideas appear notoriously strange to us, because Aristotle is openly drawing on Plato for his own purposes, with no pretense of trying to produce a just picture of Plato's own ideas. It may seem odd, and will certainly be unfamiliar, to approach the interpretation of Plato in a way that emphasizes a work like Alcinous's Handbook ofPlatonism more than Aristotle's account of Plato. Whether it is fruitful will emerge from the book taken as a whole. I certainly think that it is worth looking at a fairly extensive way of considering Plato's ethics in the ancient world, one which for the last two centuries has played almost no role in our own way of reading Plato. A few words are needed to indicate why I consider it not just a (literally) old interpretation of Plato's ethics but also new, one that can give us fresh insight. First, the ancient Platonists remind us of how Plato was read in the ancient world—that is, for some hundreds of years; and this may at the very least give us some perspective on our own assumptions in reading Plato, which, familiar as they are to us, are not nearly as well established as a tradition. Thus they can help free us from the parochialism that threatens an uncritical reliance on a familiar way of looking at things. Merely this awakening to approaches other than the ones familiar to us is surely useful, in alerting us to what we have missed, and to what we find obvious that others do not. But more substantially, ancient writers belong to the same ethical tradition as Plato. They are eudaimonists—they hold that each of us has a final end, which is eudaimonia, or happiness, and for which we seek a substantial specification. Common sense specifies happiness as a conventionally successful life, with health, wealth, and other recognized goods; reflection, developing into explicit ethical theory, directs us instead to some aim like virtue or pleasure, as a constraint on or organizing principle for our pursuit of conventional goods. Whatever our own substantial modern ethical position, it is likely to be remote from eudaimonism.2 In the ancient world, by contrast, eudaimonism, which we can see surfacing as an explicit theory in the works of Democritus and Plato,3 becomes after Aristotle the explicit framework within which ethical theories are presented and debated.4 Thus the ancient Platonists, when they read Plato, saw his ethical ideas within the same tradition within which he produced them. 2

This is obvious for forms of utilitarianism and Kantianism; but even modern versions of "virtue ethics" tend not to accept eudaimonism in anything like its ancient form. 3 With Democritus the situation is complicated by the fact that we possess only fragments of his work. See my article "Democritus and Eudaimonism" (forthcoming). 4 For detailed support for this claim, see Annas 1993.

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INTRODUCTION When we see the easy way in which they describe Plato in the terms of explicit eudaimonism, we might be tempted to say that they are assimilating Plato to later ideas. But this would be a mistake. It is true that later writers do this in some areas—they unhesitatingly ascribe to Plato large amounts of later (Aristotelian and Peripatetic) logic, for example, and this is pretty clearly anachronistic; they assimilate an implicit use of some forms of reasoning to a later explicit awareness of those forms. But with ethics their use of explicit terminology picks out a framework which can be found there in partially explicit form (as has been increasingly recognized in recent work on Plato). Rather than see this as a form of bias or later projection, we should welcome the insight we get from looking at interpretations produced by people who did not, as we do, have to work into Plato's ethical thoughts from the outside, but already found his framework to be the familiar and natural one. As we shall find, the ancient Platonists do not just see Plato as a eudaimonist (this would for them be trivially true); they also see him in terms sharpened by later debate. In particular what is important for them is the debate between the Stoics and Aristotelians on the place of virtue in happiness. (This is one thing that makes their writings more valuable on this issue than those of Aristotle, who is himself a eudaimonist, but is rather uninterested in Plato's ethical position, or in seeing Plato as here contributing to a tradition which they share.) Writing from a standpoint in which issues have been clarified by discussion, the later Platonists do not hesitate to enroll Plato on the side of the Stoics; they describe his ethical views in Stoic terms, since they take it that Plato regards as central the points that the Stoics do: the difference of kind between the sort of value that virtue has and the value of everything else, and the sufficiency of virtue for happiness. Though we may be startled by this at first, it is worth following the idea up and looking at its basis in Plato's texts (particularly since at least some Stoics themselves agreed that they were in harmony with Plato in ethics). A careful look at the texts reveals, I argue, that ancient Platonists and Stoics are right to see Plato as akin to the Stoics on some basic issues. Plato, however, has not been forced by debate to sharpen the issues that arise, and as a result he is often unclear or indeterminate on points where later Stoics had been forced by argument to come to a definite conclusion. So this ancient way of looking at Plato, far from being uselessly anachronistic, alerts us to the importance of the issues that got sharpened between Plato and the Stoics, and to Plato's contribution to them. It focuses our attention in the right place, one we might be less alive to were we to ignore the advantages of the eudaimonist perspective. Another major point emerges rapidly when we read ancient interpretations of Plato; they are utterly indifferent to the methodological approach which has been important to us since the nineteenth century, and has been dominant in

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P L A T O N I C E T H I C S , OLD AND NEW the last half of the twentieth century, namely a developmental approach. By far the majority of work on Plato, both scholarly and popular, assumes that Plato's philosophical thought underwent an overall development, sometimes taken to correspond with stages of his life. In his ethical thought Plato is generally taken to have started with an attempt to "define" ethical terms in the shorter, "Socratic" dialogues and to have moved on to a bolder, more "positive" ethical theory in the Republic. It is generally assumed that the Republic is the apex of Plato's ethical thought, and that in it Plato has moved from an early, tentative stage to a confident stage, one where ethics is connected with metaphysical and political theories. This is sometimes identified as a move from a phase which reflects the position of the historical Socrates to a phase where Plato is producing his own views, but even if we leave the historical Socrates out of it, we usually find the picture of an early, "Socratic" ethics and a later, "Platonic" one.5 This development is seen as a change in two ways: Plato is seen as moving from a rigorous, "Socratic" theory that virtue is sufficient for happiness to a weaker claim, the claim that the virtuous person is happier than the vicious, but may not be happy if external circumstances are bad; and Plato is also seen as moving from a concern solely with ethics to a conception of ethics as supported by metaphysics and situated in a political context. This framework for reading, teaching, and discussing Plato is so familiar that it may come to seem inescapable. It is a presupposition of discussion and research rather than something to be discussed itself. Yet if we are to take the ancient perspectives on Plato seriously, we should detach ourselves from this familiar context, and see whether doing so leads to interpretations that we should consider alternatives to our own. For, if we take the long view of Plato interpretation, the developmental view which we find so familiar is a mere blip on the radar, unheard-of before the nineteenth century. Nobody in the ancient world undertook to explain what we find in Plato's works via the idea that his thought underwent radical changes, or took the dialogues to be classified into "early," "middle," and "late." Rather, they read the dialogues, in a variety of orders, and looked for Plato's ideas; in modern terms they are "Unitarians."6 I think it is fair to say that in modern Plato scholarship unitarianism is not taken very seriously. I do not propose to put forward a full-blown Unitarian interpretation but merely want to examine the ancient non-developmental view of Plato's ethics, and some of its implications. If successful, this will of course 5

This is most clear and explicit in Irwin 1995. Developmentalism and unitarianism are not the only alternatives; we could read each dialogue separately, making no claims about the connection of ideas between them. The only person to have done this rigorously is Grote (1888). I do not consider this option, because it has been historically uninfluential. 6

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INTRODUCTION have implications for developmentalism in other areas of Plato's thought, but that is a different and far more ambitious project. To the ancient Platonists, Plato holds that virtue is sufficient for happiness. I explore this first in dialogues which are conventionally considered early, where the thesis is not controversial, to see how well the ancient interpretation holds up as a general claim, and against the detail of important passages. The ancient Platonists, however, find the same position in the Republic and the Laws, and this is, to modern scholarship, definitely controversial. Nevertheless, when we look in detail at these works, the ancient claim holds up better than we might have expected. And this provokes some reassessment of other things that we tend to take for granted. Central here is the privileged position of the Republic in Plato interpretation. For us the Republic is Plato's major work, the one most important for displaying his thought; it is widely regarded as the apex of a development beginning in the "early," Socratic dialogues, and as committing Plato to a political context and a metaphysical foundation for ethics. The ancient perspective is startlingly different. The ethical theory of the Republic is not seen as any kind of development from an "earlier" phase, and the Republic itself is not privileged as the central, most important dialogue. (In the ancient world, if any dialogue held that position, it would be the Timaeus.) Further, the ethical theory is not seen as being closely dependent on the political or metaphysical themes of the Republic. Nor is the moral psychology of that work seen as a radically new departure from the moral psychology of the "Socratic" dialogues—again, contrary to modern preconceptions. Looking at these issues with a fresh set of assumptions enables us to learn from the ancients—Stoics here as well as Platonists—to see central Platonic ideas in a fresh light. We have read the Republic in our familiar way only since the nineteenth century, and the context for doing that may well now appear no longer compelling. Thus a serious look at the ancient interpretation of Plato's ethics leads us not merely to adjust some details of our own interpretation, but to look hard at the way we read the dialogues, our priorities among them (for example, in the prominence we give to the Republic), and the way we standardly assume that there is an overall development—that the Republic, for example, displays an advance in ethical theory, metaphysics, political thought, and moral psychology. The alternative view that we get on all these issues gives us the beginnings of a new approach to many aspects of Plato's thought. The final topic of this book is another one where we find a striking improvement in our understanding when freed from the pressure of the developmental model. Plato's thoughts about pleasure have always been recognized as various, and as hard to make consistent. The developmental model forces a

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PLATONIC ETHICS, OLD AND NEW chronological approach on us, and thus imposes a path through the dialogues in the order in which they are conventionally thought to have been written. The ancient approach gives us an alternative path, suggesting different ways of joining and of dividing Plato's various discussions of pleasure. We are left with work to do, but with a promising line of interpretation. The ancient Platonists can point out to us an aspect of Plato which we have missed or underestimated. This happens conspicuously with the stress they lay on the idea that for Plato our final end should be being virtuous and thus "becoming like God." This theme displays the greatest distance between ancient and modern readers of Plato. For the ancient Platonists it was one of the most important and stressed features of Platonic ethics. For modern readers it is invisible. It has dropped out of accounts of Plato's ethics, despite its prominent occurrence in several texts. Here the ancients help us to rediscover something that should not have gone missing in the first place. But their way of treating it also alerts us to a weakness of their mode of interpretation. Accounts which unify may give up too soon, leaving differences as fundamental or assigning them to different phases of development. But they may also go on too far, unifying ideas which can be held together only by ignoring or downplaying real difficulties. In this case the ancient Platonists, in treating the thought that virtue is becoming like God as merely a variant on Plato's main thoughts about ethics, paper over a deep problem. In discussing this issue I have, for the only time, gone beyond the period of the officially Middle Platonists, and brought in the discussion of this problem that we find in Plotinus. This may seem slightly arbitrary, since I don't otherwise deal with Plotinus and the way he and Platonists after him saw their relation to Plato. I think that with the issue of virtue as becoming like God, however, Plotinus's special interest lies in the way in which he explicitly lays out the problem which his predecessors had not really faced. Further, in his solution he indicates the radically different way in which Platonic ethics has to be interpreted, if we hang on to virtue as becoming like God and also take a unifying approach. Here Plotinus enables us to look back on the Platonists before him and see the limitations of their unifying approach, as well as to appreciate their openness to a theme in Plato that the twentieth century has virtually ignored. It is a cliche that all interpretation takes a set of assumptions for granted, and we should not be surprised to find alternative interpretations for which different things are taken for granted. But even in the modern situation of ongoing debates about many aspects of Plato's ethics, and with far less agreement assumed about Plato than about other ancient authors, such as Aristotle, it can still be a shock to find out just how different are the ancient assumptions about Plato from our own. Some readers of this book may value the shock effect and its re[6]

INTRODUCTION suit in making us more self-aware about our own presuppositions, but may not be convinced that in the end the ancients have a more fruitful interpretation than we do. Others may come to think that they do on some points and do not on others. My own interest in the ancient Platonists arose from a concern to see whether Plato could justly be considered a eudaimonist or not, and the thought that a good place to start would be with ancient eudaimonists, who saw him as being in that tradition. I have ended up convinced that Plato is a eudaimonist and that the ancient Platonists give us the best lead as to the kind of eudaimonist he is. In the process I have found more and more to doubt in the orthodox modern ways of reading Plato, not just on ethics but in general. I have found the results exciting, and a spur to further research. There are many signs that the orthodox, developmental reading of Plato is crumbling in places and losing its unquestioned dominance. This is surely a good thing, and a sign of vigor in scholarship. I suspect that Plato studies are likely to become less settled, more uncertain, and more open to wide differences of approach. I think it would be a good idea to have the ancient Platonists join us in this exciting new development.

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[I] MANY VOICES: DIALOGUE AND DEVELOPMENT IN PLATO

"Plato has many voices, not, as some think, many doctrines." He is poluphonos, of many voices, but notpoludoxos, of many opinions or doctrines. This is a view of Plato which we read in Arius Didymus, court philosopher to the emperor Augustus,1 in his Introduction to Ethics.2 Many views have been expressed about Plato over the centuries, and it may seem perverse, when beginning a study of Plato's ethics, to hark back to an obscure ancient author who figures marginally, if at all, in our books about ancient philosophy. Modern philosophers concerned with Plato have not on the whole been very interested in the perspectives taken on interpreting him in the ancient world. For much of the twentieth century, for example, the way in which Plato was interpreted by his own school, the skeptical Academy, was ignored. In the last twenty years or so this tradition has been recovered by 1

On Arius, see Hahm 1990 and Kahn 1983. Goransson (1995) argues against many of their conclusions, and also, in chap. 10, against the conclusion reached by the nineteenthcentury scholars Meineke and Diels (restated by Hahm) that Arius Didymus the doxographer is in fact identical with Augustus's philosophical friend Arius. Goransson reminds us that the identification is a conjecture, not a matter of fact, but fails to show that it is not a reasonable conjecture. See Inwood 1996. 2 Preserved in Stobaeus Edogae 2, along with long passages on the ethics of the Stoics and Peripatetics. Goransson (1995) argues in chap, n that, although we should accept Diels's and Meineke's attribution of the two latter passages to Arius Didymus, the "introduction to ethics" is too different from them to be also so attributed. This would be a good argument only if we had more precise independent knowledge as to exactly what works Arius wrote, though Goransson shows up faults in arguments designed to prove that all three passages must have the same author.

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P L A T O N I C E T H I C S , OLD AND NEW the work of several scholars,3 and we are now familiar with the idea that for some time Plato's own school interpreted him as holding no opinions, but as putting forward a model of philosophy consisting of arguing against the positions of others without having any positive position himself. The result of this recovery of the skeptical tradition has been that we are now able to see some aspects of Plato in a wholly different light, particularly the ad hominem arguments of Socrates in the early dialogues. Moreover, we can now appreciate a philosophical rationale for Plato's use of the dialogue form, a topic which for much of the twentieth century has been the subject of indecisive literary squabbling. By writing in the dialogue form Plato is able to distance himself from the positions presented and the arguments put forward for them. He does not present his positions from an authoritative position, but puts forward arguments in a way which leaves the reader inevitably thrown back on her own resources for understanding what has been proposed. This way of proceeding privileges argument and rational support over the mere statement of a position. I suggest that, just as our understanding of Plato's methods has been greatly helped by recovery of the ancient skeptical tradition of Platonism, our understanding of Plato's ethics may be aided by our turning also to other ancient traditions of interpreting him. Prominent among these is that of the so-called Middle Platonists. In the ancient world they were just Platonists;4 it is modern history of philosophy that has seen them as lying in the middle between Plato's own Academy on the one hand and Neoplatonism on the other. There are other ancient writers whose interpretation of Plato converges with that of the Middle Platonists without their being Platonists themselves. Arius Didymus, for example, with whom I began, was not a Platonist; he seems to have been a Stoic.5 He may in fact have been one of a number of philosophers in the ancient world whose interest in Plato and Aristotle was quite like ours; it did not stem from a prior commitment to the truth of the position. However, Arius's presentation of Plato commended itself enough to later Platonists that bits of it— or possibly its source—turn up verbatim in a later Handbook of Platonism by the Platonist Alcinous.6 3

Notably, Jonathan Barnes, Gisela Striker, Michael Frede, and especially Myles Burnyeat. 4 See M. Frede 1987 and Donini 1990. 5 If, that is, Arius Didymus is to be identified with Arius the court philosopher of Augustus. 6 See Whittaker 1990 and Dillon 1993. Goransson (1995) argues that, far from Arius being Alcinous's source, the dependency is the other way around, and that Arius may be much later than we assume. Goransson's detailed arguments are not, in my view, convincing, but in any event, as far as concerns the parts relevant to Plato's ethical thought [10]

M A N Y VOICES After the end of the skeptical Academy we find a period where there is convergence between Platonists and others: Plato should be interpreted as holding doctrines. The interpretations we find naturally embody the methods, themes, and priorities of philosophy as that had taken shape after Plato. By the time the skeptical Academy died out, in the first century B.C., any philosopher interpreting Plato could not but use concepts and theories that had developed after Plato wrote his dialogues. This fact is often, indeed, thought to render them unhelpful for us, for we have direct access to Plato, so we do not need them, and their own preoccupations might seem to make them an obstruction for us, rather than a help, in understanding the dialogues. It is a real question why we should take an interest in ancient traditions of Platonism at all, if our main concern is Plato. Perhaps these people are interesting in their own right, but what do they have to do with our attitude to Plato? Shouldn't we just read Plato for ourselves, and produce the best philosophical interpretation that we can in our terms, and only then, if at all, turn to the quite secondary question of how other people, in other times and circumstances, have interpreted him? This is a common view, and partly accounts for the low level of interest among Platonic scholars in the ancient Platonists' interpretations. So we might think that turning to later Platonists and others to help us to interpret Plato is interpreting the more by the less interesting. What do we get when we turn to ancient doctrinal traditions of interpreting Plato? We find a view which is stimulatingly different from our own. We also get a salutary lesson in disengaging ourselves from our own modern assumptions about how to read Plato. Discovering an interpretation in a tradition which takes quite other things for granted than what we do, or questions what seems obvious to us, lights up points that we ignore and alerts us to what we are presupposing unawares. It might be objected that we can get this just from looking at the variety of interpretations of Plato produced in the twentieth century. But there is a drawback to this. Superficial variety may conceal deep agreements, which show up only by contrast with a tradition which is further away; the current controversy may be so gripping that we fail to notice how local it is.7 What insight do we get about Plato from the ancient doctrinal interpreta(which Goransson treats very cursorily), it does not matter to my thesis whether Arius is a source for Alcinous, or whether both are using a common source, or even whether Arius is using Alcinous, since Arius is writing from a viewpoint which does not aim to further the agenda of any particular philosophical school. Excessive concentration on the question of who said something first has often hindered appreciation of the philosophical interest of ancient interpretations of Plato. 7 Also, anyone who now gets deeply interested in Plato is likely to be already involved in a particular tradition, and her attitude to other contemporary traditions is likely to be

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P L A T O N I C E T H I C S , OLD AND NEW tions? Among other things, we may be led to question, or at least to think about, one assumption in particular which goes very deep in twentieth-century reading of Plato. This is that there is such a thing as the overall development of Plato's thought; Plato's ideas change over his life. This assumption goes so deep that its operation is pervasive and often unnoticed, and it is often assumed to be the only sensible interpretative assumption. It would seem unreasonable to deny that Plato's thought develops at all. On some points the different positions that we find in the corpus certainly suggest that he changed his mind or tried out different approaches. An interpretation presenting Plato's thought as a completely unchanging system either runs into implausibility or has to stay at a very unspecific and general level. So much, however, is compatible with recognizing false starts, different approaches to the same problem, and change of mind on one theme coexisting with unchanged views on another. It is a far cry from this to the assumption that there is a development in Plato's thought which is systematic and linear, changing from one position to another where the two cannot be held simultaneously. It is this much stronger assumption which is often found, and one sign of this is the related assumption that there is such a thing as the order of the dialogues, that is, that the dialogues can be placed in a single definitive order reflecting the development of Plato's thought. Disputes over the ordering of dialogue A and dialogue B are disputes about the nature of that development. Typically, they take the form of showing that A and B contain positions which are not simultaneously tenable, so that they can be held only successively; the dispute then turns to showing which is best regarded as coming first. I question this assumption of overall, linear development. One impetus for doing this comes from reading ancient accounts of Plato's ethics—for what I say is limited to Plato's ethics and is not a claim about the whole of his thought, though I realize that it is already controversial to think that one can separate the ethics from other aspects of Plato's thought in this way, and I have something to say, in the fifth chapter, in defense of the claim that it can. This is important, since it would be perverse to claim that the ancient Platonists are the best guides to all aspects of Plato's thought. Sometimes their approach is clearly marked by their own contemporary concerns in a way that lacks resonance in Plato, as when they ascribe to him Aristotle's and Theophrastus's logic, on the grounds that arguments in the dialogues can be analyzed using these forms. But where the ethics is concerned, we are not faced by hopeless anachronism. For the later already colored by attitudes of conflict. The fact that we are not academically in competition with the Middle Platonists makes it easier for us to appreciate them even when we are in disagreement. [12]

M A N Y VOICES Platonists are eudaimonists, as is standard in the ancient world; they take the basic concepts of ethics to be those of eudaimonia, or happiness, and virtue. When they interpret Plato as a eudaimonist, they take themselves to be bringing out explicitly the structure of ethical thought that is implicit in him. In this they are right, and they have the advantage of us in that they stand, in a way that we do not, in the same tradition of ethical thought as Plato. What does Arius have in mind when he says, as he does twice, that Plato has many voices?8 In the first passage where he says this Arius is discussing Plato's view that our end in life is "becoming like God" (a startling idea, to which I shall return). Plato, he says, discusses this according to the parts of philosophy: in the way appropriate to physics in the Timaeus, ethics in the Republic, and logic in the Theaetetus, as well as in book 4 of the Laws. But, although the style is varied to achieve eloquence and grandeur, the doctrine is consistent: Plato means living according to virtue. In the second passage Arius says that Plato makes different divisions of goods in different places: there is a twofold division of goods in the Laws (between divine and human goods); a threefold distinction among goods of the soul, goods of the body, and external goods; a fivefold list of goods in the Philebus; and so on. The first passage might lead us to think that Arius is merely contrasting variety of style or expression with sameness of idea. But in the discussions of our final end in the dialogues Timaeus, Republic, and Theaetetus, the very same expression "becoming like God" occurs in all three. What differ are the contexts and the method employed: in the Timaeus we are doing physics, in the Republic ethics, and in the Theaetetus epistemology, treated as part of logic. Different kinds of argument are employed, but we are not dealing with different ideas.9 Similarly, in the second passage Arius mentions a number of different ways of dividing up goods, which occur in different contexts, and claims that they are consistent, for these different numbers result from different principles of division, and these do not clash. What concerns him, then, is what we have called 8

The phrase occurs at 55.5—7: Platon poluphonos on, ouch hos tines oiontai poludoxos. At 49.20 is the phrase to de ge poluphonon tou Platonos, and Wachsmuth follows Heeren in adding is happy, while the person who does not, is the reverse.'10 So, in naming pleasure and pain, he establishes the origin of happiness from the emotions; and in saying 'the person who drinks from them whence he should, and where and how, is happy' he ascribes to reasoning the distinguishing element in happiness. On this point, therefore, Plato and Democritus agree, inasmuch as Plato places in excellence of reasoning the good which is primary and sought for its own sake, and in pleasure that which supervenes, which he also supposes as a consequence to be called by the same words as joy' and 'tranquillity.'"11 Here we find the same point, that pleasure is characterized both as an emotion and as something which supervenes, but we also find a clue helping us make sense of it. As an emotion, or pathos, pleasure is the origin of happiness in that it is what we begin with, but it emerges that reason plays a crucial role in what is called "distinguishing" pleasure, so crucial that reason turns out to be the more impor8

Arius ap. Stobaeus Eclogae 2.52.13-53.20. (This is an important point about Democritus, which cannot be followed up here.) 9 Timaeus poA, which Arius abbreviates, as Stephen White points out. I am very grateful to Stephen White for allowing me to see his translation and notes on this passage of Arius. 10 The quotation is from Laws 636D-E. In Arius's text the crucial phrase in brackets has dropped out here, but is discussed a couple of lines later. Plato's text is a little fuller— the point applies not just to individuals, but also to states and "any living creature"; but the passage is brief and Arius gets the gist of it. 11 Presumably, Plato is said to do this as well as Democritus, and the final clause refers to the latter's use of these terms. I follow White in rejecting Wachsmuth's addition, from Meineke, of.

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ELEMENTAL PLEASURES tant element in happiness, and pleasure, as a result, turns out to be something which supervenes (however that is to be understood). It is also important that in the passage from Alcinous the emotions, or pathe, were emphatically said to be irrational responses to good and bad. We have here, then, a picture of reason taking the lead with regard to the part of us which is irrational, and which seeks pleasure and avoids pain, so as to put it in a state in which we achieve happiness. Even at this point, we can see that the passages with which I began, with their apparently strange emphasis on the inescapability of our seeking pleasure, need not be taken as expressing a position that we would call hedonistic, namely that pleasure is our final end, that which we seek in order to be happy. It is the thought that this is what is going on which makes these passages so odd in their contexts. But all they need be taken as doing is insisting that to begin with, originally, we all seek pleasure, since pleasure is what we seek with the irrational aspect of ourselves. This is worth insisting on given that the Athenian is emphasizing realism about human motivation, one important thing stressed in these passages. But in them we also find the claim that the nature of this motivation can be affected by reasoning. This is the point which the later Platonist passages fill in for us, enabling us to get a fuller picture of what is going on. Pleasure, it appears, is an elemental response to good; we cannot but be affected pleasurably by what we perceive as good and painfully by what we perceive as bad. But Plato does not go on to conclude from this that pleasure must be our final good, or telos (at least not in these passages; the Protagoras comes into the discussion later). For we see, in the brief extract where pleasure and pain are called two springs from which we drink, that it is not just taking them that leads to happiness, but doing so as and when one should. And clearly it is the function of reason to lead us to do this. Another passage, again from the Laws, shows us, in a fairly vivid manner, how we are to understand the way that reason can lead us to the happy life, given pleasure and pain to work on as the basic responses of our irrational nature. It comes early in book i, in a discussion of the importance of education.12 The Athenian reminds his interlocutors that they have agreed that self-mastery is a good thing, giving in to oneself, bad, and says that he will clarify this by an image. Each of us is a single thing, but contains internal complexity; for we have two internal advisers, pleasure and pain. Unfortunately, these are stupid and mutually antagonistic. Other psychological phenomena are built upon these; when we have beliefs about the future, for example, if these involve pain they take the form of fear, whereas if they involve pleasure they take the form of confidence. (Pleasure and pain are thus basic among the pathe, or emotions, that we have.) We also, however, have reasoning as to which of these other things is better or 12

The most important section runs from Laws 643D6 to 64506.

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P L A T O N I C E T H I C S , OLD AND NEW worse; and the reasoning which is the common resolution of a state is called the law.13 The Athenian proceeds:14 Let's think about it in the following way. Let's think of each of us living things as a puppet of the gods, either as one of their toys or as constructed for some serious purpose, for that we don't know. But this we do know, that these emotions (pathe) in us are like cords or strings which drag us along. Being opposed to each other, they pull us in different directions to opposite kinds of action, and this is where the division between virtue and vice lies. Reason says15 that we should all follow along always with one of these pulling forces and in no way leave go of it, pulling against the other strings. This is the directing16 of reasoning, and is golden and holy, and is called the common law of the state. The others are hard and like iron, but it is soft, being golden, while the others are like forms of all sorts. We must always co-operate with the directing of the law, which is the finest; for since reasoning is fine, but gentle and not violent, its directing needs helpers so that the golden kind in us will win over the other kinds. In this way our story of virtue, which is about us as though we were puppets, would be a success, and the idea of being "self-master" pr "giving in to oneself" would become somewhat clearer, as would the point that an individual must grasp the true reasoning within himself about these pulling forces, and live following it, and a state must grasp the reasoning (whether from a god or from a human with knowledge), establish it as law, and live by it both internally and with other states. In this way both vice and virtue would be more clearly articulated for us. At first this appears to be a horrifying passage. If we are the puppets of the gods, then not only do we have a very discouraging relationship with the gods, 13

Since this section is concerned with public education, it is not surprising that we frequently find references to public reason, in the form of the law. In the present context they are of less relevance than the references to the individual's reason. 14 Laws 64407—64501. 15 Ho logos at £4—5 is here, I think, "reason." However, Saunders and Bury translate "our argument." Presumably, this is to avoid having reason tell the person to cooperate with an element in her which turns out to be reason. I agree that this is awkwardly phrased at this point, but I argue that part of the point of the image is to show us that the whole person should in fact identify with one aspect of herself, namely reason, and thus it is consistent for the virtuous person to do what reason tells her to do; in doing this she is identifying with reason rather than pleasure and pain. (In this respect the image is very like the more famous image of the person's inner complexity represented as a little person, a lion, and a changing beast, at Republic 5886—5910.) 16 This translates agoge, which has a variety-of applications; it refers to directing, leading, and guiding, but can also be used for a way of life.

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ELEMENTAL P L E A S U R E S we appear to have no freedom; what looks like freedom of action is merely the greater strength of one rather than another of the cords pulling us. It is not clear how this picture of us can help clarify the ideas of self-mastery and giving in to oneself, unless by showing that these are no more than fictions. In the passage, however, it is clear that the person and his decisions are not reduced to a battle between the tugs of pleasure and pain. The cord of reasoning is special in two ways. First, it is soft whereas they are hard and inflexible. Perhaps this is a confusing development of the image of a puppet, but the softness of the gold cord makes the point that reason can deal with pleasure and pain in ways that they cannot deal with it. They simply yank and pull, whereas it can manage and manipulate them; its greater flexibility gives it greater power over them than they have over it. Second, the person can be encouraged to cooperate with and follow the gold cord; it needs help, but the person can follow it and thus be able to withstand the pullings of pleasure and pain, inflexible though these are. The picture here of how the person is a puppet is in fact rather complex. One very important aspect of us—desire to get pleasure and to avoid pain—is simply given; we cannot choose to be without it. Insofar as we just yield to this, we will do the actions which answer to the pullings of the strongest desire at any time. However, our susceptibility to pleasure and pain, though we cannot get rid of it or wish it away, is not completely intractable. For we are also able to reason and thus to reflect on and pass judgment on our urgings toward pleasure and away from pain; we can, by reasoning, judge which are better and which worse—that is, judge them by an independent standard which cannot itself be reduced to the result of the strongest desire. Reasoning is not only independent of the outcome of the pleasure-pain struggles within the person, and capable of judging the result; it is also capable of leading and manipulating the feelings, even though they are strong and stubborn and it is comparatively weak. It can do this because it is adaptable and flexible where they are not, and thus can lead and direct them in ways that change them, whereas they are incapable of changing themselves. Reason, then, is the part of us which can lead and mold the other part, our susceptibility to pleasure and pain, which would not of itself ever produce anything other than the winner of a battle for the strongest desire. Hence, insofar as the person identifies with reasoning, and consciously and as a matter of policy tries to go along with it and strengthen its effects, he is acting to change himself, and thus initiating action, rather than acting mechanically as a result of the strongest pull. It is thus the person who just drifts and yields unthinkingly to the pulls of pleasure and pain who is like a puppet, jerked about by forces that are not under her own control. Susceptibility to pleasure and pain is genuinely part of her nature, but in simply giving in to this she is abdicating any attempt to alter or guide the way she is, and losing any attempt to control her own life. The per-

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PLATONIC ETHICS, OLD AND NEW son who tries to live by reasoning, and encourages the control which it exercises on our susceptibility to pleasure and pain, on the other hand, is doing the controlling herself. Instead of pleasure and pain just getting her to do things, she is in control of how desires for pleasure and to avoid pain are directed. She is controlling herself as a person controls a puppet; part of her needs to be controlled by the other part in order to function properly. The moral of the image seems, then, to be not that human action is always at the mercy of intractable internal forces, but rather the opposite, namely that it is open to us to control and direct internal forces that might have appeared to be intractable. But, it might be claimed, this is going too fast. For, in the image, we are all puppets of the gods, perhaps nothing more than their toys. Does it then matter which string does the controlling—the hard strings of pleasure and pain or the flexible manipulative string of reason? It does not look as though within the image any of the puppets can be said to have real control over what they do. It is hard to know how much of this idea Plato wants to suggest—the idea that both those who control their own actions and thus illustrate "self-mastery" and those who "give into themselves" and abdicate decision to the victory of the strongest desire are equally playthings of the gods. Certainly it has been often noted that in the Laws we find a far more pessimistic picture than before of the relation of humans to the divine; we should obey them gladly and be "lowly and ordered" as we follow God.17 But here it is surely equally important that the golden cord is reason, and that our reason is the divine element in us. If we are puppets of the gods, one reasonable interpretation of this is that insofar as we identify with and encourage reason, the divine element in us, we achieve control over the other aspects of us, which are not rational. This is what it is to be controlled by the divine, namely to control ourselves by reason, and not be at the mercy of the non-rational aspects of ourselves. Thus the message of the puppet image is meant to be inspiring rather than depressing: insofar as we identify with reason, the divine in us, we can control and change ourselves.18 We can now see that the passages I began with, in which Plato insisted on the unavoidability of our pursuing pleasure and avoiding pain, do not contradict their contexts, in which he insists on the all-importance of virtue for happiness. The fact that we always desire pleasure rather than pain is just a basic fact about human motivation. However much we succeed in living according to a rational ideal, we all still have to begin from the substrate of human motivation—the given, non-rational appeal of pleasure and the fact that we reject and flee from pain. In fact, all non-rational motivations, such as fear and hope, come down, 17

Laws yi6A. See Chapter 3, n. 15. This is obviously related to the idea of "becoming like God," discussed in Chapter 3. 18

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ELEMENTAL P L E A S U R E S in the end, to variants on seeking pleasure and avoiding pain, which are thus basic or elemental in our non-rational motivation. But we are more than the result of the mutual struggles of desires and aversions which we cannot help having; our reason enables us to guide and channel these, and thus to change and mold ourselves. In the Laws Plato pays a great deal of attention to the ways in which we can change ourselves and develop in some ways rather than others; this is why he insists on having so many social sanctions and such an extensive system of education and training. Nothing will do short of an education which leads the person to understand that virtue is sufficient for happiness, and that external goods are irrelevant to it.19 Reason guides us to the point of seeing that we achieve happiness by seeking to be virtuous, whatever the cost in external goods or worldly success. As we have seen,20 this has a transformative effect on the person; reason takes us in a totally different direction from that in which we mindlessly seek pleasure and avoid pain, and our values and priorities become profoundly changed. This is achieved not simply by intellectual reflection, but by an extended education and training of character, in which our tendencies to go for and take pleasure in certain things are appropriately encouraged or discouraged by a number of factors.21 The Athenian later22 says, simplifying somewhat, that all human motivation depends on the three basic drives, for food, drink, and sex. In their irrational form they are actually called nosemata, or diseased states. They must, the Athenian says, be turned toward what is best, rather than what is said to be most pleasant, by the three greatest forces—fear, the law, and true reason, backed up by the Muses and the gods of competition. Here Plato envisages an entire process of socialization, relying not just on reason but also on non-rational factors such as stress on competition, led by reason to be directed toward what is best. The result of valuing virtue in this way is not that we come to reject pleasure, or to have none. Plato assumes that the happy life must be a pleasant one. The pleasure in question, however, is not the same as the pleasure that the nonrational part of us is bound to seek in a mindless way. The pleasure of the virtuous life can be had only by the virtuous, and, of course, it takes enormous efforts of both intellectual reflection and education of character to become virtuous. In the Laws most people are said to have the wrong perspective, and to be in a fog, as far as concerns the pleasures of the virtuous life.23 19 20 21 22 23

See Chapter 2. Cf. Chapter 2. See Chapter 6. This is of course particularly stressed in the Republic and Laws. Laws 782D-y83A. See Chapter 2, pp. 46-47.

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P L A T O N I C ETHICS, OLD AND NEW Thus the virtuous have a pleasant life, but there is no neutral position from which one can evaluate this pleasure; it and its correct evaluation are available only to the virtuous. It is only from within the transformed life that the nature of pleasure is properly discerned. Plato continues to insist that the virtuous life will bring what he calls the most, or greatest, pleasure, which might suggest at first sight that it can be compared for amount of pleasure with the non-virtuous life (and given the prize). But he cannot be understood as holding the position that the virtuous has more of the very same thing which the vicious person is mindlessly going for. The greatest pleasure, for Plato, is to be found in the life in which the person aims not at pleasure but at virtue, and indeed trains his desires so thoroughly that he values only virtue, even when accompanied by all conventional evils. This is not more of what the ordinary pleasure-seeker is aiming at. Pleasure thus comes, we may say, only when not directly sought, and it comes as a result of what is sought, namely virtue. It is this idea, I think, which later Platonists and others tried to express by the idea that pleasure "supervenes." The idea here is no relation to modern complex and technical conceptions of supervention in the philosophy of science; it seems simply to be the idea that A supervenes on B if A could be directly aimed at, but is not, but instead accompanies B when B is aimed at, and aimed at successfully. (This idea of "successfully" of course requires further exploration.) Aristotle's second analysis of pleasure in the Nicomachean Ethics suggests this idea; pleasure supervenes on an activity if certain success conditions are fulfilled, but this is different from aiming directly at pleasure in performing the activity. Aristotle has been criticized for the elusive and difficult nature of his analysis of pleasure as something that supervenes, but he can certainly be held to have located, at least, a resolution of the problem. The happy life, characterized as the virtuous life, has to contain pleasure, but pleasure cannot be the goal aimed at, or we do not have a properly virtuous life. (Aristotle is clearer than Plato on why the virtuous life must be pleasant; his account of virtue and virtuous activities shows why taking pleasure in what you do indicates that you are achieving virtue, rather than a merely self-controlled state.) The idea of supervention captures the point that pleasure must accompany the virtuous life but is not the goal of the virtuous person. Plato has no word that corresponds to the later philosophical term "supervenes" (epigignesthai), but we can see why this might be thought a good term to describe his position if we draw together the different strands we have seen in the Laws. The desire for pleasure is the most basic motivation that we have, but rational reflection can so educate and train the person that they aim in an appropriately uncompromising way at being virtuous. The person who succeeds in becoming virtuous, and who does not aim directly at pleasure, in fact gets pleasure as a result of his virtue. Thus pleasure is an elemental motivation for [146]

ELEMENTAL P L E A S U R E S everyone, but the highest pleasure supervenes only on the life of the virtuous. The best pleasure comes only to those who don't seek it. The ancient Platonist understanding of Plato's position about pleasure thus is well grounded in the texts of at least the Laws. It also, interestingly, resembles the Stoic position on pleasure. In some Stoic texts pleasure is said to be a. pathos, or emotion—and thus, for the Stoics, to be bad, since all emotions already embody faulty beliefs.24 But elsewhere it is said to be a "supervention"25 in a passage which explicitly denies that pleasure is what all living things naturally go for. Rather, their primary impulse is to self-preservation, and pleasure comes, if at all, as something which supervenes when nature is successfully fulfilled. Again, we find that pleasure comes to those who don't seek it—even more strikingly for the Stoics, since, for them, to seek pleasure as a feeling or emotion is already to have gone wrong. Indeed, we can note a difference of tone between the Stoics and Plato. The Stoics are notably unenthusiastic about pleasure; they veer between calling it a preferred indifferent, natural but not valuable, and neither natural nor valuable.26 Plato, despite his obvious puritanism in some respects,27 is readier to allow that there is some force in the way most people consider pleasure to be a good. He thinks it worthwhile, as the Stoics do not, to show that our intuition that happiness involves pleasure is satisfied even if virtue turns out to be sufficient for happiness; indeed, one can regard his various grapplings with the notion of pleasure as an attempt to come out with an account of pleasure which will account for this—that is, will allow the happy to have a pleasant life even when happiness has been drastically rethought as a result of a radical reevaluation of the goods whose attainment brings us happiness. There is one notable corollary of this theory, in both Plato and the Stoics. Pleasure is natural to us, as the kind of beings we are; this is one major aspect of 24

Arius ap. Stobaeus Eclogae 2.88.8.—90.6. For the Stoics, desire and fear are the basic elemental emotions, and pleasure and pain are derivative. The later Platonists follow Plato's lead in reversing this. 25 Diogenes Laertius 7.85 — 86. In 7.149 nature is said to aim at advantage and pleasure, but presumably the way nature does this is just by allowing pleasure to supervene when natural processes are working well. 26 See Sextus Empiricus M 9, para. 73: the Stoics in general say that pleasure is indifferent and not preferred, but Cleanthes says that it is neither natural nor has value in life, having no natural being, like a cosmetic. Archedemus says that it is natural, like hairs in the armpit, but has no value, and Panaetius says that it is partly natural and partly not. The analogies of cosmetic and armpit hair are clearly meant to produce an austere effect. 27 He is always notably unenthusiastic about the processes of eating and drinking and the pleasures most people derive from them. He shares with the historical Puritans a horror of sleep, as being a waste of time, and a strong desire to stop people from sleeping much (Laws 8O7E—8o8C).

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P L A T O N I C E T H I C S , OLD AND NEW the fact that desire for pleasure and to avoid pain is characteristically human. Plato insists on the naturalness of pleasure,28 which is the accompaniment of the process back to our natural state when this has been disturbed by need or interference. But Plato, like the Stoics, also thinks that what is natural for us as humans does not stop there, but continues in our progress as ever more rational beings, who learn to live according to the conclusions of reason, and hence to acquire the virtues, and so to acquire a radically different attitude from our original one to our initial feelings of pleasure. The upshot of such a theory of pleasure, of course, is that the virtuous person's conception of pleasure is very different from that of the ordinary person with whose given tendency to seek pleasure we began. The second passage I quoted at the beginning29 starts with an emphatic statement that we are talking to humans, not gods, and thus must focus on what humans are like; a student of human nature must learn to cope with the fact that humans always go for more pleasure and less pain overall. Someone who thought that this was heading in the direction of an ethics based on maximizing pleasure would be grievously disappointed to find that the product of education in the best-run state would be a life aimed uncompromisingly at virtue. The pleasure you get from that, it might be complained, is not what was meant in the observation that everyone always goes for pleasure and away from pain. Plato is quite open about the need to educate and transform our basic urges for pleasure and to avoid pain. In a long passage in the second book of the Laws30 the Athenian comments that children's first perceptions are of pleasure and pain, and that it is "in these" that virtue and vice first come to the soul. A program of education is sketched, which establishes that it is the properly educated person who is the norm for what is truly pleasant.31 Perhaps the most radical note is struck in book 8,32 where we find the claim, recognized to be controversial and implausible, that people can be brought to think of homosexual sex as utterly taboo, in the way they think of incestuous sex; if society presents homosexual sex in a consistently negative and repulsive light, people will cease to think of it as pleasant and will actually cease to feel desire for it.33 The extent to which Plato here takes our desire for pleasure to be plastic is astonishing. Ideally, the Athenian comments, people should desire none but marital, reproductive sex, but perhaps 28

Cf. Timaeus64C-6sB. Laws 73 2D ff. 30 Laws 65 3A—671 A; cf. esp. 663 A—D. 31 In the Laws we find the depressing claim that when it comes to cultural displays it is the old whose judgment about pleasure is the normative one (658D—E). 32 8306-84iE. 33 8386; see also 8380, 84iA-C. 29

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ELEMENTAL P L E A S U R E S this is an unattainable ideal; but he is fairly confident that the desire for male homosexual sex can be got rid of.34 It is obvious enough by now that Plato's is not the familiar modern conception of pleasure as something which is always the same kind of thing whatever its sources, and which reason can serve to provide but not to alter. Plato is manifestly not telling us that the virtuous life is a good bet to get the pleasure which you were originally getting mindlessly from sensual pleasures. It is only when you give up aiming at pleasure and aim at virtue instead, in the most uncompromising way, that you get true pleasure, and that is not at all the kind of thing that you were aiming at before. What of the ordinary person applauding Plato's apparent realism in recognizing pleasure as a basic human motivation but feeling let down when she discovers that the best kind of pleasure requires the lengthy and demanding process of becoming virtuous? We can now see that this states the situation wrongly, for by the time the person becomes virtuous she appreciates that the pleasure accompanying virtue is, in fact, the best pleasure; and if she fails to achieve the requisite change of viewpoint, then she simply fails to understand what true pleasure is. This is just the fact that there is no neutral viewpoint on pleasure here. Pleasure, then, is a basic element in our non-rational motivation, but it does not survive unchanged as an element in the rationally ordered virtuous life. Reason does not function merely as the instrument to provide efficiently the pleasure which the non-rational part seeks anyway. Rather, the reflections of reason and the way they have directed the life have produced a whole in which the drive for pleasure has been thoroughly transformed. Reason has transformed a human life to the extent that the non-rational element no longer fixedly seeks pleasure, but has been trained to fall into line with reason, which seeks virtue; and the whole life as a result achieves true pleasure, which accompanies virtue without being directly sought. So far, this idea has been illustrated from the Laws, which is not usually stressed in modern discussions of Plato's views of pleasure, but which has been seen to reward investigation which reflects the emphasis of the ancient Platonists. However, the position of the Laws can reasonably be seen as similar to that of the more 34

Such attention as this passage has attracted has mostly focused on the unexpectedly harsh attitude to male homosexuality, unexpected in the light of dialogues such as the Symposium, Phaedrus, and Lysis, and this is certainly problematic. It is equally important, however, for the assumption that a drive for pleasure which Plato recognizes as exceptionally strong can be not merely repressed but actually transformed by social and cultural pressures. Plato is right in thinking that contemporary Greek culture encouraged homoerotic relationships; his mistake lies in thinking that a change in that culture would eliminate them.

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P L A T O N I C E T H I C S , OLD AND NEW familiar Republic, notably in that both dialogues explicitly defend the idea that the virtuous life is pleasant. They do this, moreover, in the context of a eudaimonist framework. We all seek happiness, and find, when we investigate properly, that happiness is to be found in the virtuous life. But it is part of our conception of happiness that it involves pleasure, and so the virtuous life must be shown to be a pleasant one. Plato undertakes to show not only this, but also that the virtuous life is a better candidate for bringing pleasure than the life of the vicious. In the Laws the argument to show this is brief.35 In the Republic we find extensive argument in book 9 to show not merely that the virtuous life is pleasant but that, notoriously, the virtuous person's life is 729 times more pleasant than that of the vicious.36 These arguments are part of the overall argument to show that the virtuous life is happy; Plato is showing us that he can account for the pleasantness of the happy virtuous life by showing us that it is the virtuous who have real pleasure, while the vicious do not. The Republic has a more theoretical discussion of pleasure than does the Laws, and three new ideas appear. Pleasure is characterized as a movement, or kinesis, whereas mere absence of pain is a state of rest (hesuchid). Lack or need is also characterized as an emptying, and pleasure as the subsequent filling or replenishment. And the virtuous person's pleasures are said to be real, whereas the vicious person's are unreal, in a way that rests directly on a metaphysical theory about the nature of the real and the illusory.37 These differences are, however, minor when we bear in mind the many overall similarities between the two dialogues about pleasure in the virtuous life, and the importance of reason in the argument. Both dialogues, as already stressed, argue that the happy life, which has turned out to be the virtuous life, is the most 35

Laws 661 — 63. This is the only passage where virtue, happiness, and pleasure are brought together, but the connection is clear. The young person persuaded to be virtuous, if he were to discover that this life were not after all the most pleasant, would complain to his preceptors; they wanted him to have the happiest life he could, and persuaded him that this would be achieved by being virtuous. If this life turns out not to be the pleasantest life then, it is taken for granted, his complaints would be reasonable. 36 The whole passage goes from 58oD to 588A. At 58iE and 588A it is stressed that we are comparing lives for pleasure and not for some other kind of advantage; but the arguments are not establishing an independent measure for pleasure, which virtue will happily chance to meet. Rather, the arguments are best seen as establishing a conception of pleasure which Plato takes to be correct and which enables him to show that the virtuous life is the happiest, since he can account for the deep-seated assumption that happiness involves pleasure. 37 These points all emerge in the second of the two arguments, that which runs from 5836 to 588A. The first argument relies only on the idea that the virtuous person's judgment about the superior pleasantness of his own life is authoritative in a way that the judgments of the honor- and money-lovers are not.

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ELEMENTAL P L E A S U R E S pleasant. The Republic argues, as vigorously as the Laws, that reason must rule in the person for her life to be pleasant. This is the explicit conclusion of the second Republic argument;38 when reason rules, then the rational part obtains its own pleasures, and so do the other two parts, the honor-loving and the moneyloving; thus all the soul's parts get what is appropriate and the person's life as a whole is pleasant. When, however, reason does not rule, none of the parts gets the pleasure that is appropriate to it, and the whole life goes askew and fails to be pleasant overall. The Republic assumes, moreover, as does the Laws, that our desire for pleasure is plastic, and can be educated and drastically changed and transformed by social and cultural forces, particularly education. The extensive passages on education in the early books of the Republic assume that education results in the person's taking pleasure in different kinds of thing, and that this is a part of the virtuous person's development. The virtuous person, who by the end of book 9 is said to have a far more pleasant life than the vicious, is also said by the end of book 9 to care for external goods only insofar as they support and enable his virtuous condition. And finally, in the Republic as much as the Laws we find the idea that there is no neutral viewpoint from which a rational decision can be made between the virtuous and vicious lives with a view to the pleasure in them. The virtuous person has a life which contains what is called the greatest, or most, pleasure; but there is no scale on which this can be measured for quantity against the pleasure of the vicious life. The virtuous person's judgment, that she has the pleasantest life, is the correct, authoritative one; just this is the conclusion of the first Republic argument.39 The major difference between Republic and Laws in their treatment of pleasure is that in the Republic reason has its own pleasures, and so for reason to rule in the person's life is for reason to ensure the other parts' proper pleasures in a way that also achieves its own. In the Laws the tripartite account of the soul has been dropped, and reason is simply opposed to the non-rational part of the soul as a whole. Reason does not have its own pleasures; the virtuous life is achieved by reason's molding and controlling our desires for pleasure. This is not as major a difference as we might expect at first. Both dialogues hold that the happy, and so pleasant, life is achieved by the person's reason achieving its proper ends— 38

Republic 586E-587A. At Republic 582E-583A the virtuous person's judgment is preferred because it is based on "experience, intelligence, and reason" (empeiria, phronesis, logos). But these are themselves not neutral; the non-virtuous types have some kind of experience and reason, but these are not authoritative, since they do not take into account the whole soul and its perspectives on the different parts, merely the interests and perspective of one of the parts. 39

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P L A T O N I C E T H I C S , OLD AND NEW that is, subordinating and molding the non-rational aspects of the person. The Republic allows that in doing this, reason achieves its own pleasures; but this does not make pleasure the goal of the person. The Republic and Laws, then, differ here in tone rather than substance; both see a non-rational drive for pleasure being transformed by reason into a part of a life which is virtuous and happy, and so pleasant. But does this idea transfer to other dialogues? No other dialogues contain ideas which are closely or directly comparable. The Philebus and Gorgias, two dialogues in which pleasure is a major theme, differ considerably from Laws and Republic, and not merely in being concerned with the individual's pleasures rather than with questions of social training and education. In them we do not find any idea which could easily be transposed into the schema we have seen so far, of pleasure as a basic element in human motivation, transformed by reason in such a way that pleasure accompanies the virtuous life without being sought. Nonetheless, we find ideas which are in an obvious way comparable. Republic and Laws can be compared with the other two dialogues only at a high level of generality, much higher than that at which they can be compared with one another. Still, it is, I think, worth bearing even high-level similarities in mind as we look at Philebus and Gorgias. The Philebus opens with a dispute as to whether the happy life is constituted by pleasure or by knowledge; which of these is the good that we all seek?40 It is surprising that we find no mention of virtue here, and very little of virtue and happiness elsewhere.41 Plato's concern in the Philebus is not with virtue, the importance of which is taken for granted, but with the kind of contribution that pleasure and reason make to the life which renders the agent happy. That this is the virtuous life is not here argued. The good life, we are told, must be complete and self-sufficient, and so can be constituted by neither pleasure nor reason alone. Pleasure alone, with no reason or thought, would provide the life of a clam; reason, with no pleasure, that of a god. For humans, the happy life must involve a combination of both.42 The question is, of course, what kind of combination? We then get a famously obscure passage in which all beings are distinguished into four classes—unlimited, limit, mixture, and cause. Pleasure belongs in the class of the unlimited, reason in that of cause, and the good life in that of mixture. The point of this abstract discussion seems to be to insist that the good life is not a combination of reason and pleasure in which they are both simply ingredients—a life in which we have 40 41

Philebus nB-E.

The occurrence of ton bion eudaimona at nD6 is the only significant one in the dialogue (occurrences at 2268 and 4767 are trivial). Similarly, of the six occurrences of arete (45E6, 48Ep, 49Ai, 55Ci, 63E5, 64E7), only the last three are significant. 42 Philebus 2OC-22B. See Chapter 2, pp. 36-38. [152]

ELEMENTAL P L E A S U R E S now one and now the other. Rather, it is a combination in which pleasure is raw material which enters the combination in a way determined by reason. Reason dominates the mixture in that it determines what the limit is that is to be imposed on pleasure for pleasure to be able to contribute to the happy life. Why should reason be thus dominant? The idea is that the pursuit of pleasure in itself can never organize a life in the way that is necessary for the achievement of happiness; a life built around the pursuit of pleasure is bound to be a life with no overall organizing principle. This point is made vividly in the Gorgias, where the overall organizing power of reason is connected to the possession of the virtues. "It looks as though anyone who wants to be happy must seek out and practice self-discipline, and beat as hasty a retreat as possible away from selfindulgence. The best course would be for him to see to it that he never had to be restrained, but if he or anyone close to him (whether that's an individual person or a whole community) does ever need it, then he must let justice and restraint be imposed, or else forfeit happiness. . . . We should devote all our own and our community's energies towards ensuring the presence of justice and selfdiscipline, and so guaranteeing happiness. . . . We shouldn't refuse to restrain our desires, because that condemns us to a life of endlessly trying to satisfy them. And this is the life of a predatory outlaw."43 The happy life must be the rationally ordered life, one which contains organizing principles with the complexity and degree of rationality that a skill possesses; in the Gorgias the practice of skills provides an analogy which Plato takes to have persuasive force (whereas in the Philebus the need for the happy life to be rationally ordered emerges rather from a metaphysical account). To live a life of pleasure-seeking is, according to the Gorgias, to live a life which is mindless, the life of what is in the Republic and Laws called the non-rational part of us. Callicles, who (ineffectively) defends this life, claims that the life of pleasure is one in which you aim at satisfying desires, without regard to restraint by other factors. Socrates objects to this on the grounds that it makes the good that is sought dependent on the pain or discomfort that is removed as the pleasure is achieved. The pleasure of eating requires hunger; the pleasure of scratching requires an itch; and so on. We may wonder why this is supposed to be an objection; in the Laws Plato insists that pleasure and pain are characteristically human motivations; they are important to us just because of the characteristically needy and ever-changing beings that we are. So we would expect Plato to accept the idea that pleasure requires a preceding felt discomfort or pain; indeed, when he discusses pleasure, he tends to see it as essentially a repletion or restora43

Gorgias 5oyC8-E3, trans. Robin Waterfield, World's Classics Series (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994).

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P L A T O N I C E T H I C S , OLD AND NEW tion of a lack.44 For Plato, however, this—restoring lacks as they come along— is never enough for a good human life. Reason must control and transform the non-rational aspects of us for us to achieve the kind of happiness that humans need. Merely seeking pleasure cannot provide what is needed for the living of a human life; for we do not just seek pleasure, we also realize the need for rational organization of our life as a whole, as the life of a rational being. A life spent pursuing fulfillment of desires is, Socrates claims in the Gorgias, like a leaky jar which constantly needs replenishment, or a bird that excretes while it eats;45 we are meant to recoil from the idea that this is all a human life amounts to. The two arguments with which Socrates crushes Callicles' position also depend on this idea, that pleasure cannot be a final end in life which amounts to happiness. Pleasure cannot amount to happiness, since happiness is found over an entire life, whereas pleasure can coexist with its opposite, pain. Seeking pleasant experiences, then, falls far short of a structured attempt to achieve happiness over one's life as a whole.46 Moreover, if achieving pleasure is our sole aim, we will not be able to make sense of our admiration for the traditional virtues; we despise cowardice, even if the coward achieves far more pleasure than the brave person, but the pursuit of pleasure cannot generate this attitude simply from within itself.47 Plato retails this last argument in both the Gorgias and the Philebus,48 and seems to regard it as especially forceful against the idea that pleasure alone can generate what we regard as necessary parts of the good life. A great deal of the Philebus is taken up with further, often much more subtle, arguments for the inadequacy of pleasure to constitute happiness on its own. 44

This is especially prominent in the Philebus, as it is in Aristotle's account of pleasure in Nicomachean Ethics, book 7. 45 Gorgias 4930—494E. 46 Gorgias 4946—497A. This argument has been criticized on the ground that it unfairly pits happiness, as a state holding over one's lifetime, against the pleasure of a single moment. But Callicles commits himself at 49 lE-4920 and 4940 to saying that pursuing pleasure through the untrammeled fulfilling of desire just is what it is to live happily, so it is fair for Socrates to take him to be putting forward an account, but an inadequate account, of happiness, and to press the point that pursuing pleasant experiences cannot amount to what we reasonably expect of pursuing happiness. Pleasure-seeking cannot fill the conceptual role required of happiness. In this point, as in the discussion of the Gorgias and Philebus more generally, I am indebted to the work of Daniel Russell. 47 This argument holds even against a theory which (like that of the Protagoras) identifies happiness with the long-term, prudent pursuit of pleasure over one's life as a whole. I thus agree with those who claim that the Gorgias contains arguments which hold against a theory of the Protagoras type, and thus that we cannot argue that the former must predate the latter. (In fact, the Protagoras is so different from all the other dialogues that consider pleasure that any chronological hypotheses would be unwise.) 48 Gorgias 4970-4996; Philebus 55A-C.

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ELEMENTAL P L E A S U R E S The main drift of the Gorgias and Philebus is quite similar: the pursuit of pleasure and avoidance of pain on its own cannot generate the ordered and organized life which happiness requires. Pleasure must fit into a reasoned structure, dominated by the virtues, before it can become part of the good life. The Philebus, for example, distinguishes four kinds of pleasure which are "false"; one thing that unites them is that they all involve either a failure of reasoning or something which interferes with reasoning, and thus they are all excluded from the good life as not being compatible with the overall organizing rule of reason. Pursuit of pleasure unrestrained by the virtues turns out to be a kind of floundering, a pursuit of local satisfaction at the cost of overall coherence. In one respect the two dialogues give the impression of being more opposed than they in fact are. The Gorgias appears hostile to pleasure, and is often regarded as anti-hedonistic, whereas the Philebus is more sympathetic to the extensive discussion of pleasure, and finds it a place in the good life. But the Gorgias is not so against pleasure as may appear from passages where Socrates contrasts the selfsufficient life to Callicles' unrestrained pursuit of pleasure. Callicles spurns this life as that of a stone or a corpse, and it appears to be a life of freedom from disturbance rather than one containing pleasure.49 However, Socrates then develops the idea of the rationally ordered life in a way that takes off from the admission that there are good pleasures50—indeed, we need the rationally ordered life so that we can reliably obtain good rather than harmful pleasures—and it explicitly does not reject pleasure, but rather produces the right attitude to pleasure on the agent's part.51 Plato does not seem to have thought through the relation of the self-sufficient life to the rationally ordered life. The Gorgias seems at any rate to reject the presence of intense, disruptive pleasures in the good life, without specifying which pleasures would find a place in it. The Philebus discusses these, in a way which could reasonably be seen as filling a gap rather than signaling a change of position. Although it is more interested, and more detailed, in discussing pleasure, it is not notably generous in its allowance of pleasure into the good life at the end of the day. At the end of the 49

Gorgias 492D—E is the passage where Callicles rejects Socrates' suggestion that the life without needs would be happy. 493D-494A puts forward the idea that happiness could be a matter of filling one's jars and keeping them filled; Callicles retorts that the pleasure just is the filling of the jars, so that the pursuit of pleasure requires the jars to be leaky. These passages certainly suggest that the self-sufficient life contrasted to the life of Calliclean pleasures (whether or not it is identical to the "philosophical life" at 5OoC) is a life without pleasure. 50

51

Gorgias 499D ft.

At 5076 we find it as part of the characterization of the virtuous person that he will flee and pursue the things, people, pleasures, and pains that he should.

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P L A T O N I C E T H I C S , OLD AND NEW dialogue52 Socrates allows that the good life will contain all kinds of knowledge, practical as well as theoretical. How will pleasures fit in? The question is raised in an imaginative way. Pleasures are asked whether they would prefer to live with or without reason, and reply that it is neither possible nor a good thing for them to be separated from reason. "We would prefer to live side by side with that best kind of knowledge, the kind that understands not only all other things but also each one of us, as far as that is possible."53 Pleasure, that is, understands its own inadequacy to provide happiness on its own. Reason, however, has a stricter line, refusing to have anything to do with intense pleasures. The only pleasures allowed in to the happy life are those that have been called true and pure, that is, pleasures which do not rely on awareness of a previous lack or need for their pleasantness; and the pleasures of health and of virtue.54 What kind of pleasure will the happy life contain, then? Again, it will be far from the kind of pleasure which ordinary people have in mind. In the Philebus Plato seems wedded to the idea that all pleasures are in some way fulfillments of lacks or needs, and so even true pleasures, and the pleasures of being healthy and virtuous, depend for their pleasantness on their being some kind of need which is being met. In their case, however, the lack or need is not one that we are aware of, so we do not appreciate these pleasures by contrast with a previous pain or discomfort. This conclusion is awkward in some ways. The pure pleasures, acceptable in the good life, are illustrated by restricted pleasures of the senses, and the pleasures of learning; there is a brief and rather offhand reference to the pleasures that "attend on virtue," but if we are to be consistent with the model so far, these must be the pleasures of becoming virtuous—that is, those involved in the process of becoming virtuous as the pleasures of learning are involved in the process of learning. But then it turns out, rather strangely, that the virtuous, happy life does not involve the pleasures of being virtuous.55 The virtuous, happy person will 52 53

Philebus 590 ff.

Philebus 6301-3, trans. Dorothea Frede (Indianapolis: Hackett, 1993). 54 Philebus 6^-7. 55 This is a vexed question of Philebus interpretation. At 63E we find, apparently in addition to the pure pleasures already mentioned, pleasures that are "together with" health and temperance, and "all those that commit themselves to virtue as to their deity and follow it around everywhere" (Frede translation). Yet in the final ordering at 66C-D (repeated at 6yA) no place seems to be made for them, suggesting that they should after all be understood to be examples of the pure pleasures, and thus the pleasures of becoming healthy, or virtuous, with no previous felt lack. Many have understandably found this simply implausible, but even if 63E is read so as to commit Plato to regarding the pleasures of virtue as a different kind from the previous pure pleasures, it must be admitted that he says very little about them and appears to neglect them in the final summing-up.

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ELEMENTAL P L E A S U R E S take pleasure in smells and some other sensory experiences, and in learning and other examples of intellectual and moral progress; but virtue at the end of the day does not seem itself to involve pleasure. Many have thought, not surprisingly, that the conclusion of the Philebus makes a disappointingly minimal concession to pleasure. It does not in the end recommend a life which seems by ordinary standards markedly more enjoyable than that recommended in the Gorgias. But this should not really be surprising. As in the Laws, Plato realizes that pursuit of pleasure and avoidance of pain are basic to human nature; but the good life for humans, as is familiar by now, is one in which this element has been so thoroughly transformed by reason that the resulting pleasure of the happy life can be appreciated, as pleasure, only from the perspective of the happy life. The ordinary person would think that such a life was not enjoyable at all, but this is not seen as an objection. The Gorgias and Philebus are not easily amenable to the idea that pleasure is something that supervenes on the happy life, as we find that in the Laws (and related ideas in the Republic). However, they express an idea which can reasonably be seen as related, namely that pleasure cannot be the overall goal of the happy life; it can at best be a minor and thoroughly transformed part of it, given the role that is assigned to it by reason, which in its uncompromising commitment to virtue transforms the person's life overall. In all cases, pleasure is seen as something that can have a place in the happy life only if it accepts the organizing role of reason, and aiming at pleasure is taken to be essentially short-term; aiming at pleasure can at best produce a string of gratifications, but never generate a rationally ordered whole, still less generate any concern for virtue. The ancient Platonist analysis of Plato's position on pleasure has, then, pointed the way to a reasonable account of four dialogues. Pleasure is a basic element in human nature, but it is a mistake to think that pleasure could be our final end. It is only when we recognize virtue as the aim that constitutes happiness for us that we get the kind of pleasure that the happy life involves, and by then our perspective has been so transformed that we recognize, as being the highest and best form of pleasure, something which the unregenerate pleasure-seeker would scarcely count as pleasure at all. In all these dialogues reason plays a role in ordering the virtuous life which can thoroughly transform the non-rational part of the soul and what it goes for. And our urge for pleasure, though basic to us, is taken to be plastic, something that can be so transformed that as we move from living mindlessly to living in accordance with reason, we take pleasure in entirely different kinds of activity, and find the highest pleasure without directly seeking it. Even on a more generous construal of the dialogue than I have given, the pleasures of virtue get strikingly little attention.

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P L A T O N I C E T H I C S , OLD AND NEW To nobody's surprise, the standout here is the Protagoras. Most of this dialogue is occupied by discussions about the nature of expertise, and the relation of what we take to be the separate virtues. In a short passage at the end, however, Socrates uses a thesis about pleasure to show that knowledge cannot be overcome by other factors, such as pleasure, pain, love, or fear. The thesis is not introduced very clearly, but Socrates claims that "good" is interchangeable with "pleasant," and that when we ask about the goodness of things, it is merely their pleasantness that we bear in mind; so it seems reasonable to call the thesis hedonism, that is, the idea that it is pleasure that is our final good, with reference to which we estimate which things are good and benefit us.56 In this passage two things are remarkable. One is that the ordinary conception of pleasure is taken at face value and remains unchallenged; our desires for pleasures are not treated as plastic, or in need of education before pleasure could be our final end. Second, reason is, amazingly, treated as having a purely instrumental role with regard to pleasure. For we find that we fail to achieve pleasure through making quantitative, and recoverable, mistakes; we think immediate pains are to be avoided and immediate pleasures taken, for example, and underestimate the consequences of so doing. What we need, we are assured, is an "expertise of measurement" to deal with pleasures, and this will enable us to weigh and measure pleasures in a way unaffected by proximity; it will give us an objective calculus of pleasures and thus enable us to pursue pleasure in a rational and objective way. "Since it has been shown that our salvation in life depends on the right choice of pleasures and pains, be they more or fewer, lesser or greater, farther or nearer, then doesn't our salvation seem primarily to be the art of measurement, which is the study of relative excess and deficiency and equality?"57 Nowhere else in Plato is the function of reason, in shaping the happy life, taken to be that of playing a purely instrumental role in enabling us to maximize pleasure as that is ordinarily conceived. Nowhere else is pleasure, as that is ordinarily conceived, taken to be something which can be taken up uncriticized and untransformed into the happy life. In all the other four dialogues pleasure is an element which appears greatly altered in the final product. The Protagoras passage, in which the ordinary notion of pleasure becomes our final end and has reason to serve it, is thus exceptional. However, it has chanced to fit in well with post-utilitarian theories of pleasure to such an extent that its eccentricity as a Platonic position tends to escape us. Many scholars have found in the Protagoras passage a satisfying account of pleasure and reason, in part because it fits in with 56

Protagoras 35iA— 36iD. Protagoras 3S7&S -63, trans. Stanley Lombardo and Karen Bell (Indianapolis: Hackett, 1992). 57

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ELEMENTAL P L E A S U R E S modern views that limit reason to an instrumental role and assume pleasure to be something uniform whatever its sources. But does this hedonist thesis represent Plato's own view? Or does he present Socrates as arguing on its basis in a dialectical spirit, testing its consequences while remaining uncommitted to it?58 It may not be significant which position we take here; since the Protagoras passage is so out of line with Plato's other treatments of pleasure, it may not matter so greatly exactly why it is so out of line. Nonetheless, if the passage indicates a change of mind on Plato's part, it is a change of mind so fundamental, especially on the role of reason, that it is more charitable to suppose the passage to be discussed dialectically. First, if it expressed Plato's own view, this would suit a modern preoccupation with finding a definite and quantifiable specification of what our final end is; this has appealed to scholars with otherwise utterly different methodological assumptions.59 But this is, precisely, a modern preoccupation; it has no echo in the ancient world, and is quite foreign to ancient ethical theory. To see the Protagoras passage in these terms is to run an obvious risk of anachronism. Moreover, if the hedonist thesis is Plato's answer to a substantial philosophical problem, it is strange that it is arbitrarily tacked on to the end of a long dialogue most of which, on this view, is about something else. If, however, the thesis is one which Socrates is considering without being committed to, this fits with a conception of the dialogue as teaching a philosophical lesson about methodology, something done throughout the dialogue. Protagoras appears throughout as someone who, though he has a big reputation, fundamentally dislikes argument and is no good at it; his attempts to meet Socrates' arguments 58

The "dialectical" interpretation is put forward by Michael Frede, in his introduction to the Hackett translation (see n. 57); however, he does not support it in detail from the text. 59 That the Protagoras gives us an interpretation of eudaimonia which is definite and quantifiable and thus gives us a decision-procedure for working out what to do is a view shared by Grote (1888), Nussbaum (1986), and Irwin (1995). See Grote's chapter on the Protagoras, and also his chapter on the Euthydemus, where he complains of the alleged vagueness of Plato's account of happiness. "There is only one dialogue in which the question [What is the Good?] is answered affirmatively, in clear and unmistakeable language, and with considerable development—and that is, the Protagoras: where Sokrates asserts and proves at length, that Good is at the bottom identical with pleasure, and Evil with pain: that the measuring or calculating intelligence is the truly regal art of life, upon which the attainment of Good depends: and that the object of that intelligence—the items which we are to measure, calculate and compare—is pleasures and pains, so as to secure to ourselves as much as possible of the former, and escape as much as possible of the latter" (pp. 540—41). See Nussbaum 1986, chap. 4, and Irwin 1995, chap. 6. Irwin (p. 88) endorses Grote's claim that the questions about happiness raised in the Euthydemus can be answered with pleasure as a "more determinate and specific" conception of happiness.

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P L A T O N I C E T H I C S , OLD AND NEW founder because of vanity and inability to argue. In the context of the dialogue Socrates has no motivation suddenly to espouse a position about pleasure and reason which runs sharply up against every other treatment of the issues that we find in Plato. But he does have the motivation to force Protagoras to argue properly.60 We thus end up finding no completely overall view about pleasure and reason in Plato; though the Laws and Republic can usefully be considered together, and the Philebus and Gorgias, although in some ways different, fit in with this picture, the Protagoras gives us a view which cannot be harmonized with them. Does this matter? When we look at the entire picture of Plato's treatments of pleasure, it can be seen to matter less than might appear from recent scholarly concentration on the Protagoras. Whether Plato puts forward the view as one that he is committed to at the time, or merely has Socrates put it forward for dialectical discussion, the Protagoras examines a view of pleasure in a way that has no analogue elsewhere in Plato. Why should Plato not have tried out a different view on a difficult matter? It might appear, however, as though I have taken too unifying a view on the remaining four dialogues. They differ, after all, in style and method quite considerably. I have tried to follow as far as I reasonably could the track of the ancient Platonists, who thought that Plato had a single view on pleasure. I have shown that this view has much to commend it, and that it directs us to a more fruitful interpretation than the usual approach through contrasting Protagoras with Gorgias. Clearly, however, much remains to be explored. Some may feel that the level of description uniting all four dialogues is too general; perhaps what links Philebus with Gorgias renders them both substantially different from the Laws and Republic, complicating the comparison I wish to make here. It is also, of course, startling to us to link the Philebus more closely with the Gorgias than with the Laws, to which it is closer in the standard developmental story. Some may also object to the idea that the Protagoras treats pleasure dialectically, whereas we find Plato discussing pleasure in a committed way in the other four—since the Gorgias, at least, has some features linking it to discussions in the Protagoras and other Socratic dialogues.61 It has never been part of my claim, however, that the ancient Platonists should always have the last word. Their claims are in any case too broad to satisfy mod60

See Appendix for an extended defense of the dialectical reading of Socrates' position about pleasure in the Protagoras. 61 I am grateful to Brad Inwood for pressing this point. I remain convinced, however, that the Protagoras is dialectical in a stronger sense than other Socratic dialogues, since the practice of question and answer is the subject of the dialogue to a greater extent in it, and accordingly its Socrates is more methodologically self-conscious.

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ELEMENTAL P L E A S U R E S ern standards of scholarship. In the case of pleasure, the helpful texts fit the Laws best, and little or nothing is said to show how the account should be extended to other dialogues. Nor do we have any idea how the Protagoras was brought into their picture. Nonetheless, the ancient Platonist account serves, I think, to move us forward in many ways. It directs us to crucial texts that have been neglected because of developmental emphasis. It directs us to an interpretation which offers the hope of finding an overall account in dialogues which also treat pleasure rather differently. And it indicates that the kind of account we find in Plato is one quite remote from modern theories of pleasure, but is, like Aristotle's theory of pleasure, philosophically interesting in its own right. Once again, the ancient Platonists turn out to point us down an old road which leads us in new directions.

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CONCLUSION

I hope that the reader has come to share my thought that the ancient Platonists point us in an illuminating direction, and that modern Plato studies—at least in the area of ethics, which is all I have tried to cover here—would benefit from a greater readiness to see them as partners in the interpretation of Plato. Certainly it seems quite inadequate to regard them as merely fitting Plato into an anachronistic mold. Of course I have not tried to argue that Plato's ancient interpreters are right on all points. There are obvious reservations that we are in a position to make about their approach to Plato. For a start, since they are not a unified school, they do not always agree on a crucial matter. We have seen that Alcinous's approach to the moral psychology of the Republic is utterly different from, and at odds with, that of Galen and Plutarch. Alcinous sees the tripartite soul as compatible with the moral psychology of the Socratic dialogues, including the reciprocity of the virtues, and in the process works out an account of the tripartite soul which gives reason a role of persuasion and agreement in the development of the other parts and their integration into a whole. Galen and Plutarch, on the other hand, see the tripartite soul as a combination of elements which are robustly separate and always in a state of struggle and conflict, in which the winner dominates by force and violence. Finding two such disparate interpretations, however, obviously should not lead us to lose confidence in the ancient Platonists as interpreters—for here the two different approaches alert us to a tension in Plato's own writings. Later writers pick up on one or the other side of a debate sharpened by the development of Stoic moral psychology. As we have frequently seen, a later debate or development clarifies an issue for ancient inter-

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CONCLUSION preters of Plato more than it was clarified for Plato himself.1 In this way the ancient Platonists, by their divergencies within a common set of assumptions, may direct us to real problems in Plato. The ancient Platonists, as is clear by now, were more Unitarian in tendency than all but a few modern interpreters are. I have argued that despite their currently unfashionable status, Unitarian interpretations deserve to be taken seriously. The current dominance of the developmental paradigm for interpreting Plato has frequently blinded us to the idea that it is merely one among alternatives, not the only serious option. Moreover, there are many different kinds of Unitarian interpretation. Sometimes we cannot but feel that the ancient Platonists tried to find a unified system of ideas at too high a level, passing over problems of detail. When they look for Plato's account of our final end, they emphasize an idea which modern scholars have ignored, of virtue as "becoming like God." But they assume that this can be read into Plato's work as a whole, as though Plato always has a single account of virtue and happiness which can accommodate this. As we saw in Chapter 3, this assumption is too optimistic; although the idea of aiming to become like God plays an important role in Plato's thought, it also appears to go with an unworldly streak which turns out to be in considerable tension with his more usual view of virtue as the practical skill of working on the materials of this world, that is, putting external goods to use. Also, though the ancient accounts of Plato's position on pleasure direct us to a more helpful place than modern developmental views, they too pay little attention to the ways in which this account might be fitted on to a number of dialogues with rather disparate views on pleasure. As to how a possibly conflicting piece of evidence, such as the Protagoras, might be dealt with, they are silent. Again, this does not seem to be a good reason for ignoring or rejecting the ancient Platonists, but rather is a reason for following up in greater detail than they do the interpretations they propose. Sometimes we may also feel that the later Platonists imposed on their reading of Plato more precision on an issue than Plato's own writings warrant. When they read Plato's dialogues in terms of the three parts of philosophy, we may sometimes feel that this imposes a degree of self-consciousness about method and treatment not always appropriate to Plato. But once again this does not invalidate their approach; it merely shows that we must be cautious in our own 1

The same may be true for the sufficiency of virtue: most ancient Platonists hold that this is Plato's view, whereas Plutarch and Calvenus Taurus denied it. Unfortunately, we know nothing of their grounds for holding this. It is tempting to think that they ascribed to Plato an "Antiochean" view on the basis of the passages discussed in Chapter 2, but this is speculation.

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P L A T O N I C E T H I C S , OLD AND NEW employment of it. Analyzing Plato philosophically in terms of the three parts of philosophy is not so dissimilar to the approach of modern books and articles on Plato, which divide his works up in ways that are familiar and congenial to us; no such approach implies that we should simply disregard the dialogue form and its implications. However, the ancient approach may warn us against a common and influential reading of the Republic in particular. Because in it we find ethics, metaphysics, and politics mixed together, we may wrongly infer that they are more closely linked than they are—that the ethics depends on the metaphysics or the politics, or both, for its content. It has been argued at length that such inferences are mistaken. Worse, we may, because of the central role that the Republic has come to have for us, think that this mixture is either typical of Plato or presented as a solution to problems that arise for dialogues where the issues are treated separately. The ancient thematic approach is here useful in directing us away from a mistaken emphasis on the Republic and a mistaken interpretation of its contents. Despite reservations such as this, however, the ancient Platonists have proved to be useful partners in the project of interpreting Plato. We would, after all, expect eudaimonists to have an edge in interpreting a eudaimonist theory, and this proves to be the case. We would expect them to take advantage of the greater precision and clarity about the issues achieved through lengthy debate, and this is what we find. If we are inclined to be dismissive about, for example, the tendency to see Plato in Stoic as against Aristotelian terms, we are dismissing the viewpoint of philosophers within a debate in favor of our own, although we are outside the debate and may not be sensitive to the development of the issues. Indeed, it is surprising that as a resource for discussing Plato's ethical theory the ancient Platonists have been relatively neglected in scholarly discussion. One final reservation has already been noted. In the twentieth century unitarianism has often been associated with an approach to Plato which is dogmatic in the pejorative sense: insensitive to the arguments on which positions are based and to which they answer. We need to recover the idea of a Unitarian approach which allows for the arguments to have due weight. Here the ancient Platonists are particularly interesting. Some take Plutarch's quite open position, welcoming the skeptical Academy, while others take the narrow, dogmatic line of Numenius and reject it. The people we call Middle Platonists were aware of following a tradition which identified Platonic philosophy with Socrates' practice of ad hominem arguing and refusing to be committed to his own philosophical position. In taking Plato to hold a system of doctrines, they could choose to turn their back on that tradition, as Numenius did, or else to look to it for support and continuity. Even those of them who do not explicitly raise the matter could find it open to them

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CONCLUSION to accept their own historic tradition. For doctrine can coexist alongside the practice of ad hominem argument. Even if the latter does not directly support the former, it alerts us to the importance of clearing away false opinions before adopting others taken to be true, and also the importance of adopting a position solely as the result of a reasoned conviction that it is true—a conviction that can come only from thorough personal reflection and argument. Accounts such as those we find in Alcinous's Handbook ofPlatonism could and can be used as compendia of views to be learned and parroted. But they can also serve as the basis for discussion and argument, leading the reader to question her own position as to what Plato thinks and how well based it is. Used as a stimulus to reflection in this way, such works get the reader to question her own views as to the truth of the matter in engagement with Plato. We cannot, for example, properly answer the question whether Plato holds that virtue is sufficient for happiness, without reflecting for ourselves on the grounds for this view. In this book I have tried to take the ancient Platonists as partners in something like this way. So taken, they contribute to the ongoing relationship between Platonic doctrine and Platonic argument which forms part of most modern interpretative practice. If this makes the ancient Platonists sound like modern interpreters of Plato, this seems to me a vindication of my approach rather than an objection to it; for it has been my aim all along to show that where Platonic ethics is concerned, we can learn from the old, mainly by seeing how it can contribute more than we might think to the new. Of course, we do not have to read Plato as the ancients did. But we do not have to read him as the Victorians did, either. And it is Victorian assumptions about how to read Plato (particularly with respect to the Republic) which linger unremarked in our practice, not ancient ones. And hence it is, perhaps surprisingly, the ancients who are best fitted to wake us from our developmental slumbers.

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APPENDIX: HEDONISM IN THE PROTAGORAS

Is the hedonist thesis in the Protagoras Socrates' own position, or is it a position adopted ad hominem against Protagoras? This view of the options informs much recent work on the dialogue, but perhaps the idea that these are exclusive alternatives does not do justice to them, or to ancient views of the issue. Certainly the thesis is presented, in the argument we find in the dialogue, in an ad hominem manner. It is worth tracing the interaction of Socrates and Protagoras in the dialogue to bring this out. Protagoras is introduced to us as someone who holds forth at length and makes an evasive answer to a straightforward question (318A—B). When he is forced to be precise, claiming that he teaches the expertise of citizenship (3IQA), Socrates points out that this is inconsistent with Athenian democratic ideology, leaving Protagoras with a problem, since he hopes to find customers in Athens for his supposed expertise. Protagoras responds with a story and discussion (32oC— 328D) which, rather than clarifying his position, bring out vividly the difficulties for it. The ability in question, now called justice, is something that everybody has an aptitude for, and picks up from their cultural surroundings, like learning one's native language. Protagoras claims that his teaching merely furthers this; if so, however, his notion of an expertise of virtue seems to be a feeble one, falling far short of the standards which Socrates assumes when he is talking about expertise. The bulk of the dialogue consists of Socrates' attempts to show Protagoras that, in thinking of virtue as made up of unconnected "parts," he is thinking of it in a way that implies that it is not teachable in the way implied by Protagoras's claims to be an expensive teacher. However, it is also a continuing lesson in the contrast of method; Socrates persistently tries to get Protagoras to engage in argument, unsuccessfully, since Protagoras (like many pretentious lecturers)

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APPENDIX turns out to be useless at argument, handicapped by a combination of ineptitude and ego. Protagoras retains his superiority at continuous speeches, but by the end of the dialogue his claims to be an intelligent teacher have been very thoroughly undermined. Socrates' method of argument is called dialegesthai. The conversation at 3356— 3 3 8E reveals that, alongside a broad sense of dialegesthai, meaning discussion or argument in general (335D, 3366), the audience recognizes a narrower sense in which it refers to the method of argument that Socrates uses, and can be described as "dialectical argument" (3356, 3360— D). In the Protagoras this requires that the interlocutor defend a thesis and answer Socrates' questions honestly (33 iC), but, in contrast to other Socratic dialogues, it does not require that the thesis defended be what the interlocutor is personally committed to (3336—0). The interlocutor must agree to be the respondent and to defend the thesis against Socrates' questions; the point of doing that is not, here, directly to test the interlocutor's beliefs, and hence his life, but to test the thesis, as a way of discovering whether it is true. It is indirectly a test of both respondent and questioner in that it serves to clarify what they are committed to, and enable them to discard false beliefs (333C, 348C, 36oE~36iA). So, throughout the dialogue, Socrates makes Protagoras be the respondent. In the first argument (3306—33 2A) he introduces Protagoras to this idea by joining him as the respondent against an anonymous questioner. Thus he gives the answers, but then forces Protagoras to see that he, Protagoras, is committed to the answers, since it is his thesis that has been questioned and he has gone along with Socrates' answers (33oE-33iB). Protagoras, however, balks. Forced into answering yes or no to a question, where the answer yes clearly commits him to an assertion conflicting with his original one, he refuses to say either, trying to disengage from the argument and changing the subject by drawing a distinction (33iC—E). Unable to think of a move to make if he says no, and unwilling to be committed to contradicting himself, he dodges the issue. It is the first, but not the last, time in the dialogue where he makes a move familiar on the part of people who find argument threatening and uncongenial. Socrates drops the argument and then walks Protagoras firmly through the second argument (332A—3336), allowing no irrelevance, pointing out the options, and forcing Protagoras unwillingly to admit that he cannot hold to his original statement. Protagoras, clearly worsted, henceforth tries to avoid dialectical argument, but is not allowed to (though there is no doubt that Socrates' method is the one that Plato approved of, Socrates is not, and perhaps is not meant to be, an endearing figure in this dialogue). In the third argument Protagoras, anxious to avoid a repetition of what happened in the second, takes the first opportunity to go off on an irrelevant speech

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HEDONISM IN THE PROTAGORAS (334A—C), and the argument is aborted. Socrates, seeing that Protagoras is unwilling to persist with dialectical argument (3 3 5 A—B), washes his hands of the discussion, and has to be prevailed on by the audience to stay, and to accept a kind of quid pro quo whereby he and Protagoras discuss a poem by Simonides before the argument is resumed. Socrates' outrageous interpretation of the poem is not directly relevant to the main argument (though it is worth noting that Simonides, the poet whose work he treats so cavalierly, is traditionally the first poet to compose for money, and the reference to Prodicus and Simonides at 34oE—341A links the poet with the Sophists, probably because of their commercial attitude). When the argument resumes, Socrates makes Protagoras clear about the position he is to defend as respondent: the earlier thesis is dismissed, and Protagoras undertakes to defend the claim that courage is distinct from the other virtues, and in particular from wisdom (3490). Socrates first tries to get Protagoras to defend this directly, but Protagoras yet again evades the argument by going off in his own direction (35oE—35iA). This time Socrates switches the argument very abruptly; at 35iB he brusquely introduces another idea, the first appearance of the hedonist thesis, which Socrates tries to get Protagoras to defend, though Protagoras rejects it as his own personal position (35iD). Socrates introduces hedonism as an idea of his own (3510), but when at 35iE Protagoras, still failing to grasp that he is the one supposed to be defending the thesis, treats the idea as a thesis Socrates is defending, Socrates abruptly rejects this, insisting rather rudely that he is in charge of the argument, and tries yet a third tack to get Protagoras to face the argument. This time he focuses on the existence of akrasia. Despairing of getting Protagoras to defend it, however, he reuses the tactic of the first argument; he joins Protagoras against a fictional third party, in this case "the many." This time the third party is cast as the respondent, and Socrates (and notionally Protagoras) asks the questions. Protagoras, still confusing the importance of querying a thesis with the matter of who holds it, has to be persuaded of the point of examining views ascribed to "the many" (353A), but thereafter introduces no more irrelevancies, and at the end of the long argument Socrates insists that the existence of akrasia has been disproved (358E). This argument depends on the respondent ("the many") accepting not only the existence of akrasia but hedonism; it is pointed ^out at 3 55 A that the argument can be rejected if the respondent is willing to give up hedonism. This point makes it clear that hedonism is being defended as a position in argument by a respondent who does not accept it in person, since it was made clear at 35iC that in fact "the many" do not accept hedonism. Since Protagoras has notionally joined with Socrates in the argument, he cannot dissent, and with this in hand Socrates ruthlessly makes Protagoras defend the distinctness of courage and wisdom, which predictably leads to Protagoras's being forced

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APPENDIX to admit a conclusion inconsistent with his initial claim (36oD—E). Protagoras is ungracious and tries to personalize the dispute, but in the end concedes defeat more politely (362D-E). Hedonism, as we have seen, is not the actual position of the many, though they are made to defend it in argument. Is hedonism Protagoras's position? Personally, he rejects it, but it appears as part of the position which he is assuming in the final argument (36oA), and he makes no argumentative moves to reject it, so he is left in the potentially embarrassing position of having accepted a position in argument which he was unwilling to take on. Finally, is hedonism Socrates' own position? On the one hand, it is introduced as a position which Socrates unsuccessfully tries to get Protagoras to accept, and which is rejected by the many. Socrates is the only one discussing it, and at 35104 it is marked as what Socrates says (ego gar lego). As soon as Protagoras starts treating it as Socrates' own position in the argument, however, Socrates drops it abruptly and tries a different tack. We thus have unambiguous indications both that Socrates introduces the position and that it is not his position in the argument. He has, after all, spent much of the dialogue trying to explain, guide, and bully Protagoras into being the respondent. It would make no sense at all for him, so late in this project, to start defending any position in his own person. The dialogue, then, gives us clear evidence that hedonism is not Socrates' own position, if by that we have in mind a position defended in argument. But the careful explication of dialectical argument in the dialogue makes it clear that this provides no evidence at all either for or against the idea that it is Socrates' position in the sense of a thesis which he personally holds. In the Protagoras what you personally believe and what you defend in argument are two quite different things, as is illustrated by Protagoras's various inept confusions of them. Is the fact that Socrates explicitly introduces the idea himself evidence that he personally accepted it, despite refusing to defend it in argument? No, as we can see from the briefest reflection on actual argumentative practice. Philosophers often introduce theses into the argument which they do not themselves personally accept, and for precisely the reason which Socrates lays out in the Protagoras: they are interested in finding out the truth about the thesis, not in the issue of who personally believes what. That this is what Socrates is doing is indeed strongly suggested by the fact that it crops up in his third attempt to get Protagoras to understand how to argue about courage and wisdom. Thus all we can reasonably infer is that Plato thought hedonism in this form worth formulating and discussing, and so introduced it into Socrates' argument. At a minimal level, then, he takes it seriously. Is this position an exclusive alternative to the standard doctrinal interpretation? It depends on what the doctrinal

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HEDONISM IN THE PROTAGORAS position is. Since the hedonism of the Protagoras is so different in kind from the forms of theory about pleasure which occupy Plato elsewhere (pleasure being taken at its face value and set up as our final end, and reason subordinated to an instrumental role in obtaining it), perhaps there is not so much difference between an interpretation holding that Plato commits Socrates to hedonism only in the Protagoras and one holding a position like the above, that he introduces it as a thesis worth discussing and using in an argument about the unity of the virtues. (An important difference would remain in that on the standard doctrinal view, Plato is indicating a way of explicating the unity of the virtues which he himself, if only temporarily, accepts, whereas on the view sketched above, Plato would be, in this dialogue, raising problems about the unity of the virtues rather than giving his own solution to it.) However, an interpretation according to which Plato takes hedonism seriously as a thesis worth introducing into argument is scarcely strong enough to sustain the idea that the hedonism in the Protagoras is an important aspect of a whole segment of Plato's thought, serving to explain Platonic thesis outside the Protagoras itself. There is little evidence as to how the Protagoras was read in the ancient world, but, although the kind of interpretation given here is clearly in the spirit of ancient skeptical interpretations of Plato, we find no trace of the modern view that hedonism of this sort can serve to give a good answer to questions arising outside the dialogue. Perhaps this is connected to the fact that at any rate the Platonists were more interested in Plato's accounts of pleasure elsewhere, which make pleasure transformable by reason, than in an account of pleasure which turns reason into an instrumental means to achieve pleasure as an unquestioned goal.

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CAST OF CHARACTERS

Brief biographical notes are provided on authors referred to in the book. The notes refer only to what is relevant for this book; for fuller information, see the Oxford Classical Dictionary (3d ed., 1996) or the Garland Encyclopaedia of Classical Philosophy (ed. D. Zeyl). ACADEMY Plato's school, originally in the grounds of a gymnasium. After Plato's death the Old Academy (Speusippus, Xenocrates, Polemon, Grantor, and Crates) for a time developed original metaphysical and possibly ethical ideas, and seem also to have argued about the interpretation of Plato's works. With the headship of Arcesilaus (around 268 B.C.) the Academy took a different turn, to emulating the ad hominem and negative argumentative style of Socrates, and continued, the most famous successor being Carneades, as the New or Skeptical Academy. We know little of institutionalized attention to Plato's work at this date. The Academics principally argued against their main dogmatic rivals, the Stoics, in ever more organized and familiar ways. From the accession of the last head, Philo of Larisa, around 110 B.C., the Academy's tradition was under stress. Philo himself held a modified position: views reached as a result of systematic argument are not established as true, but warrant some reasonable confidence. Against this Antiochus broke away to found a frankly dogmatic, eclectic school, and Aenesidemus broke away in the other direction, to found a new form of radical skepticism named after Pyrrho. After the sack of Athens in 88 B.C. the Academy petered out as an institution. From the first century B.C. we find various "Platonists" who interpret Plato as holding doctrines and are committed to these, but they are not continuous with the Academy and do not form a unified school or institution.

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CAST OF C H A R A C T E R S ALBINUS A Platonist philosopher, pupil of Gaius. Galen heard Albinus lecture at Smyrna in A.D. 151—52; his date and place are otherwise unknown. The only work of his preserved is a short preface to Plato's dialogues (Prologos or Eisagoge) (text in Hermann's Teubner edition of Plato). Extensive notes on Plato, based on lectures by Gaius, and probably commentaries on Phaedo and Timaeus have been lost. In 1879 the German scholar Jakob Freudenthal proposed that Albinus was the author of the Handbook ofPlatonism that we have, the author's name "Alcinous" being a corruption of Albinus. Until recently, Albinus has been treated as the author of the work, but recent scholarly work has thoroughly undermined the identification, and with it the assumption of a Platonist "School of Gaius." ALCINOUS Author of a Handbook ofPlatonism, otherwise unknown. In 1879 the German scholar Jakob Freudenthal proposed that "Alcinous" was a textual corruption for "Albinus," thereby identifying the author with the Platonist Albinus, who has a place and date. Until recently, Albinus was treated as the author of the work, but the identification is now generally rejected. As a result, Alcinous has reverted to having no fixed date (the work could have been written between the first century B.C. and the second century A.D.) and to being for us no more than a name. There are correspondences, one major, with the account of Platonism in Arius Didymus. While the author of the Handbook was identified with an author in the second century A.D., this was taken to imply that the Platonist author copied from an earlier non-Platonist history of ideas; but now that the date of the Handbook is once more regarded as uncertain, no conclusions about date or dependency are secure. All we can say is that Alcinous and Arius share some of their sources. ANONYMOUS COMMENTATOR ON THE THEAETETUS Author of a commentary on papyrus, preserved only in its first part, on Plato's Theaetetus. The author knows and rejects the position of the skeptical Academy, and writes as a doctrinal Platonist, but cannot be identified with any other Platonist known to us. The commentary's date is disputed; suggestions range from the first century B.C. to the second century A.D. (the date of the papyrus). APULEIUS Platonist philosopher from Madaura, born around A.D. 125. He also wrote works of rhetoric and a novel, The Golden Ass. His work On Plato's Doctrines in two books is in some ways comparable with Alcinous's Handbook, particularly in the ethics. When the Handbook was ascribed to Albinus, this gave rise to the idea of a Platonist "School of Gaius." But careful comparison shows that, though in some respects they may rely on a common tradition, the works are not similar overall or in detail.

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CAST OF C H A R A C T E R S ARISTOCLES An Aristotelian philosopher of the first or second centuries A.D. Nothing is known about him, unless he can be identified with the "Aristoteles" who was the teacher of Alexander of Aphrodisias, the great Aristotelian commentator. Long extracts of Aristocles' history of philosophy are quoted in Eusebius's Preparation for the Gospel. They are generally of a high standard when compared, for example, with Diogenes Laertius. ARISTOTLE of Stageira, 384—322 B.C. Plato's most famous pupil, who eventually founded his own school, the Lyceum. Aristotle in several of his own works engages with Plato's ideas, but he also devotes much attention to other philosophers, and the account he gives of Plato's place in the history of philosophy is in many ways puzzling and unconvincing. Later Platonists either tried to harmonize away divergences between Plato and Aristotle (for example, Arius) or regarded them as essentially opposed (for example, Atticus). ARIUS DIDYMUS First-century B.C. philosopher, probably to be identified with Arius the court philosopher of Augustus; possibly a Stoic. Fragments survive on philosophers' views about physics (edited by Diels); also three long passages on ethics, preserved in the anthology collected by John Stobaeus in the fifth century A.D. Two are long accounts of Stoic and Aristotelian ethics. The third is a condensed and confused introduction to ethics, which contains material on Plato. Correspondences between Arius and Alcinous were thought to show Alcinous's dependence on Arius, as long as Alcinous was identified with the later Platonist Albinus. But without this identification it is not clear which author is the earlier (especially as the identification of Arius Didymus with Augustus's court philosopher is not certain). We can safely say only that Arius and Alcinous share some sources. ATTICUS Platonist philosopher, ca. A.D.I50-200, possibly at Athens. Passages survive from his works, attacking Aristotle and the idea that Plato's ethical ideas are similar to Aristotle's. He took a literal view of the creation of the world in Plato's Timaeus. CHRYSIPPUS Ca. 280—208 B.C., from Soli in Cilicia. Third head of the Stoa and its most influential philosopher; he restated Zeno's positions and strengthened them by copious argument and organization. DEMOCRITUS Philosopher from Abdera, fifth to fourth century B.C. The second and more influential philosopher of atomism. Plato never mentions him, though his ideas are clearly in view in Laws book 10; but his ethical views are

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CAST OF C H A R A C T E R S represented by Hellenistic authors as eudaimonistic in form, as are Plato's, and his views on pleasure are coupled by Arius with Plato's view of pleasure in the Laws. DIOGENES LAERTIUS Second- to third-century A.D. author of a ten-volume Lives of the Philosophers, which combines chatty gossip with accounts of their philosophy. Diogenes is uncritical and is only as good as his sources, which are very mixed. The account of Plato's philosophy is comparable with other "Middle Platonist" accounts. GALEN A.D. 129-ca. 210, from Pergamon. Doctor with philosophical interests. His work The Doctrines of Hippocrates and Plato defends a radical position about parts of the soul which he claims to find in Plato, particularly the Republic and Timaeus. He pits this against the Stoic view and claims Posidonius as an ally. NUMENIUS of Apamea, second century A.D. A Platonist, sometimes referred to also as a Pythagorean. His work On the Revolt of the Academy from Plato belittles the skeptical Academy and claims that it was an aberration from the true Platonic tradition, which he holds to be Pythagorean, converging with ancient wisdom from India, Persia, Israel, and Egypt. PHILO OF ALEXANDRIA Ca. 20 B.C.- A.D. 45. Jewish philosopher, whose works take the form of commentary on the Pentateuch. Philo's philosophical education is extensive, and he makes use of Stoicism as well as Platonic themes. He can be counted as a "Middle Platonist" if due allowance is made for the fact that his own self-conception is as a student of Scripture rather than as a member of a Greek philosophical school. PLATO of Athens, ca. 429—347 B.C. Plato wrote a large number of dialogues throughout his long life. We know little about the audience or audiences for these dialogues, or about the relation between the dialogues, especially the more technical ones, and Plato's own teaching in the Academy. Plato's school went through different stages after his death (see Academy), but his works seem to have been continuously popular because of their literary appeal. After the end of the skeptical Academy the rise of "Platonism," with Plato's ideas treated as a set of doctrines, could take the form of commentaries on dialogues, or handbook accounts of his major ideas. PLOTINUS of Lycopolis, A.D. 204—270. Platonist philosopher of great originality, generally considered the first "Neoplatonist," since his work (arranged by his follower Porphyry in six sets of "enneads," or groups of nine treatises) breaks

[i 7 6]

CAST OF C H A R A C T E R S with previous Platonists in its intense philosophical focus on a set of abstract issues arising from Plato's works, but developed in a distinctively new way. PLUTARCH of Chaeronea, ca.A.D. 45-125. Platonist philosopher, who also wrote numerous Lives of famous Greeks and Romans. His hostile works against Stoics and Epicureans almost certainly use arguments from the skeptical Academy, which he respects. His own version of Platonism, however, is that of a set of doctrines, though supported by and answerable to argument. He is personally more interested in the metaphysical and religious aspects of Platonism than in the ethics. POSIDONIUS Ca. 135-51 B.C. Stoic philosopher from Apamea. Although he defended Stoicism, his interests ranged beyond those of his predecessors, and he was interested in natural phenomena and their explanations more than was typical for a Stoic. In psychology he made some important innovations, the exact nature of which is difficult to determine because of the bias of Galen, our major source. SOCRATES of Athens, 469—399 B.C. Socrates devoted his life to philosophizing, and was put to death by the restored democracy. He wrote nothing, and his philosophical legacy was immediately and continually disputed. Several writers as well as Plato wrote "Socratic dialogues" in which he was represented as a figurehead for different ideas. The appropriation of Socrates continued into the Hellenistic period, with the skeptical Academy and the Stoics both regarding him as a founding figure. Socrates was agreed to be the ideal figure of the philosopher, but the content of his ideas continued to be interpreted in mutually conflicting ways. ZENO of Citium, ca. 334—262 B.C. Founder of Stoicism, he laid its basis in all major areas, and was an influential teacher.

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EDITIONS USED

Albinus Eisagoge eis tons Platonos dialogous. In Platonis dialogi secundum Thrasylli tetralogias dispositi, vol. 6, ed. C. F. Hermann. Leipzig: Teubner, 1853, I 47~5 I Aldnous J. Whittaker. Alcinoos: Enseignement des doctrines de Platon. Les Belles Lettres. Paris: Bude, 1990. Anonymous Commentator on Plato's Theaetetus Text, translation, and commentary by G. Bastianini and D. Sedley. In Corpus delpapirifilosofidgreci e latini, vol. 3. Florence: Olschki, 1995, 227—562. Apuleius J. Beaujeu. Apulee: Opuscules philosophiques (Du Dieu de Socrate, Platon etsa doctrine, Du monde). Les Belles Lettres. Paris: Bude, 1971. Aristotle Nicomachean Ethics. Ed. I. Bywater. Oxford Classical Texts, 1894. Politics. Ed. W. D. Ross. Oxford Classical Texts, 1977. Arius Didymus Stobaeus. Eclogae 2. Ed. C. Wachsmuth. Berlin: Weidmann, 1884. Atticus E. des Places. Atticus: Fragments. Text and translation. Les Belles Lettres. Paris: Bude, 1977. Cicero Definibus. Ed. J. N. Madvig. Copenhagen, 1876. De officiis. Ed. M. Winterbottom. Oxford Classical Texts, 1994. Tusculan Disputations. Ed. T. Dougan and R. Henry. New York: Arno, 1979.

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E D I T I O N S USED Diogenes Laertius H. S. Long. Diogenis Laertii Vitae Philosophorum. Oxford Classical Texts, 1964. Galen P. de Lacy, ed. and trans. Galeni De Pladtis Hippocratis et Platonis. Corpus Medicorum Graecorum 5.4.1, 2, 3. Berlin: Akademie Verlag, 1978, 1980, 1984. Numenius E. des Places, ed. and trans. Numenius. Les Belles Lettres. Paris: Bude, 1973. Philo On Flight and Finding. Ed. F. H. Colson and G. H. Whittaker. Philo, vol. 5. Loeb Classical Library. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1934. Plato Platonis Opera. Vol. i, ed. E. A. Duke et al., 1995. Vols. 2-5, ed. J. Burnet, 1901—7. Oxford Classical Texts. Plotinus Plotini Opera. Ed. P. Henry and H. R. Schwyzer. 3 vols. Oxford Classical Texts, 1964-83. Plutarch Platonic Questions. In Plutarch's Moralia, vol. 13, part i, ed. H. Cherniss. Loeb Library. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1976. Pseudo-Pythagorean ethical writings The Pythagorean Texts of the Hellenistic Period. Trans. H. Thesleff. Acta Academiae Aboensis, Humaniora 30.1. Abo, 1965. Pseudopythagorica Ethica. Ed. B. Centrone. Naples: Bibliopolis, 1990. Sextus Empiricus Sexti Empirici Opera. 3 vols. Ed. H. Mutschmann and J. Mau. Leipzig: Teubner, 1914—58.

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BIBLIOGRAPHY . 1992. Review of The Chronology of Plato's Dialogues, by L. Brandwood. Bryn Mawr Classical Review 3.1, 5 8 - 74. Konstan, D., and P. Mitsis. 1990. "Chion of Heraclea: A Philosophical Novel in Letters." In The Poetics of Therapy, ed. M. Nussbaum. Apeiron (special issue) 23, 257-80. Lefkowitz, Mary. 1981. The Lives of the Greek Poets. London. Lilla, S. 1971. Clement of Alexandria. Oxford. Long, A. A. 1988. "Socrates in Hellenistic Philosophy." Classical Quarterly 38, 15071. Reprinted in Stoic Studies, ed. A. A. Long (Cambridge, 1996), 1-34. Merki, H. 1952. Homoiosis theoi: Von derplatonischen Angleichung an Gott zur Gottahnlichkeit bei Gregor von Nyssa. Freiburg. Morgan, M. 1990. Platonic Piety. New Haven. Nussbaum, M. 1986. The Fragility of Goodness. Cambridge. Price, A. 1995. Mental Conflict. London. Richard, C. J. 1994. The Founders and the Classics. Cambridge, Mass. Riginos, Alice. 1976. Platonica: The Anecdotes Concerning the Life and Writings of Plato. Leiden. Roberts, J. 1994. Athens on Trial: The Antidemocratic Tradition in Western Thought. Princeton. Rue, R. 1993. "The Philosopher in Flight: The Digression (i72c-i77c) in the Theaetetus." Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 10, 71-100. Schofield, M. 1984. "Ariston of Chios and the Unity of Virtue." Ancient Philosophy 4, 83-96. . 1991. The Stoic Idea of the City. Cambridge. Sedley, D. 1996. "Three Platonist Interpretations of the Theaetetus." In Form and Argument in Late Plato, ed. C. Gill and M. M. McCabe. Oxford, 79-103. . "The Ideal of Godlikeness." In Oxford Readings in Plato: Ethics, Politics, Religion and the Soul, ed. G. Fine (Oxford, 1999). Shorey, P. 1904. The Unity of Plato's Thought. Decennial Publications of the University of Chicago 6, 129—214. Reprint. New York: Garland Press, 1980, i —88. Stopper, M. 1981. "Greek Philosophy and the Victorians." Phronesis 26, 267-85. Tarrant, H. 1983. "Middle Platonism and the Seventh Epistle." Phronesis 28, 75-103. . Forthcoming a. "Platonic Interpretation in Aulus Gellius." . Forthcoming b. "Politike Eudaimonia: Olympiodorus on Plato's Republic." Turner, F. 1981. The Greek Heritage in Victorian Britain. New Haven. Vander Waerdt, P., ed. 1994. The Socratic Movement. Ithaca, N.Y. Vlastos, G. 1991. Socrates, Ironist and Moral Philosopher. Cambridge. Von Fritz, K. 1971. "The Philosophical Passage in the Seventh Platonic Letter." In Essays in Ancient Greek Philosophy, vol. i, ed. J. Anton and G. Kustas. Albany, N.Y. 408-47. WaldronJ. 1995. " What Plato Would Allow."NOMOS 3 7, Theory and Practice, 138-78. White, J. L. 1986. Light from Ancient Letters. Philadelphia. Whittaker, J. 1990. Alcinoos: Enseignement des doctrines de Platon. Les Belles Lettres.

Paris.

[184]

INDEX LOCORUM

ALBINUS Prologus 5 6.151.2-4

89 n.45 59n.i9

ALCINOUS Handbook ofPlatonism 2, 10, 45, 165 127 n.24 152.14 122 n.i7 152.23-29 109 nn.35, 36 chap.3 84 n.28 chap. 27, 5 44 11.42, 102 n.i7 180.9-16 52 n.i, 56 n.i4 chap. 28 120 n.9 chap. 29 123 n.2i 183.10 122 n.i6 183.19-22 183.37-184.10 124 n.23 120 n.9 chaps. 31, 32 185.37-186.16 127 n.24 139 n.6 chap. 32 chap. 34, 1-4 ?6n.i5 Platonic Definitions 4iid 121 n.i2 ALEXANDER OF APHRODISIAS De mixtione 216.6 14 n.i2

ANONYMOUS COMMENTATOR ON PLATO'S THEAETETUS col. 9.39 122 n.i9 col. ii.16 122 n.i9 col. 54.38-43 19 n.26 ANONYMOUS PROLEGOMENA TO PLATO'S PHILOSOPHY 24.1-19 27 n.45 APULEIUS De Platone i-3 2.23.253

109 n.36, in n.43 59n.i9

ARISTOTLE Magna Moralia 51 1182315-22 119 n.5 bk.2 chap. 15 71 n.5i MetaphysicsS 987a32-bio 97 n.5 1078bi2-107934 97 n.5 io86a37-bn 97 n.5 Nicomachean Ethics 50, 146 bk.i chap.7 36 n.22 1097325-30 37 n.23 [185]

INDEX Nicomachean Ethics (continued] bk. 7 15411.44 bk. 10 52 11.4 uo6b8 —16 131 n.43 H44bi—17 121 n.i5 H58b26-ii59aii 71 n.5i bk. 10 chap. 7 H77b26-ii78a8 64 11.32 H78b8-i8 66n.42 Politics 91 I279a22—I28oa6 I289a26 b26 bk.7 chap.i

92 n.5O 92 11.50 41 11.34

ARISTOCLES AP. EUSEBIUS Preparation for the Gospel bk.n chap.3 109 11.36 bk.n chap. 3. i -9 no n.4O ARIUS DIDYMUS AP . STOBAEUS 9 n.2 Eclogae 2 22 n.3 39.20-41.25 42.11-13 109 n.36 13, 48 n.54 49.20 49.23-25 14. nn, 56 n.i4 49.8-9 52 n.2 140 n.8 52.1353.20 I4nn 54.10 — 12 54.12 45 n.47 55-5-7 13 50.2-4 15 n.2i 88.8-90.6 147 n.24 ATTICUS frag, i des Places frag. 2 des Places

109 n.36, no n.37 50 n.62

AUGUSTINE, ST. City of God 8-5 8.1-4

66 n.39 109 n.36, no n.39

AULUS GELLIUS Attic Nights bk.9 chap. 5

139 n.5

BASIL, ST. Letters 244-3 265.2

14 n.i4 14 n.i4

CALCIDIUS Commentary on the Timaeus 269.20-270.25 non.39 CICERO DefinibusS bk.2.92 bk.3 bk.3.6o-6i bks.4, 5 bk.5 bk.5.i2 bk.5. 19-21

76 n.i2 112 n.46 43 n.40 21 n.33 44 n.43 5211.4 53 n.5

De natura deorum 2.5.13-8.22 107 n.28 De officiis 2. 53

76n.i3

Tusculan Disputations 5.34-6 41 n.35 5.100 76n.i2 5.34-36 83 n.27 Varro 19

109 n.36

CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA ProtrepticusS 1.5.3 I4n.i6, 9.88 I4n.i7 Dio CHRYSOSTOM Orations 2.56 14 n.i6 DIOGENES LAERTIUS Lives of the Philosophers 3.56 109 n.36 3-62 27 3-63 16 3.80 48 n.52 7.139-41 109 n.33 7.149 H7n.25 7.40 in n.42 7.85-86 147 n.25 DlODORUS SlCULUS

Histories bk. 29, 19.1 14 n.i7

[186]

INDEX DIONYSIUS OF HALICARNASSUS De compositione verborum 16 15 n.i8

MATTHEW, ST. Gospel according to 1.18-24 2911.48

EUSTATHIUS

Commentary on the Iliad vol.i, 702.14 15 n.i8 vol.2, 25.3 15 n.i8 vol.2, 175.21 15 n.i8 vol.3, 855.26 15 n.i8 vol.4, 52.4 15 n.i8 vol.4, 61.12 15 n.i8 vol.4, 193.20 15 n.i8 vol.4, 402.26 15 n.i8 vol.4, 547.3 15 n.i8 Commentary on the Odyssey vol.i, 287.17 15 n.i8 vol.2, 317.43 15 n.i8 GALEN On the Doctrines of Hippocrates and Plato 3.1.16-21 130 11.36 4.1.5-7, 14-15 130 11.36

4.2.27

4.3.6

4.5.18

5.5.30-35 5.6.9-22 5.7.43, 52 5.5.4-5 5-8.25-33

130 11.38 130 11.36 130 11.38

13211.45

132 n.45 130 11.36 136 11.56 no 11.38

NICEPHORUS GREGORUS Historia romana 432.17 1411.16 NUMENIUS

On the Revolt of the Academy from Plato 23 PHILO OF ALEXANDRIA On Flight and Finding 63 65 11.37 82 65 n.37 On the Creation 146 65 n.37 On the Decalogue 72-75 65 n.37 On the Special Laws 4.73 65 n.37 On the Virtues 8-9 66 n.37 167-68 66 n.37 JOHN PHILOPONUS Commentary on De anima 377.26 1411.13

HlPPOLYTUS

Refutation 1.18

109 11.36

JOSEPHUS Jewish Antiquities J n T bk.i, 117.3 4 . 7 LONGINUS On the Sublime 34.1

15 n.i8

MARCUS AURELIUS Meditations 9.29 94n.55

PLATO Akibiades 58, 100 I33B-C 58 nn.iy, 18 Apology 33-34, 37, 40, 47, 75, 79, 115 28B-D 33 n.8; 34 nn.i2, 13, 14, 37 n.24 29D-E 33 n.7, 34n.i5 29D~3oB 49 36B-D 33 n.9 36D-E 87 n.39 37A 33 n.9 376 35n.i6 4iC—E 34 n.io 4iC8—D2 97 n.2

[187]

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